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Item type:Publication, Digital Transformation and Innovation in Organizations : A Latin American Perspective(Springer Nature Switzerland, 2025); ; ;Antonia Teran-BustamanteThis volume discusses the intersection of digital transformation and innovation in firms, sectors, and regions in Latin America. It addresses the region’s labor market challenges in the advent of the digital era and the influences of AI. The chapters cover topics ranging from education, organizational culture, sustainability, ethics, and human resources. Exploring how digital and STEM literacies can serve as a tool for developing skills in organizations and emphasizing the need for human adaptability in the context of Industry 5.0, this book provides scholars with case studies to better understand the ongoing debates on labor market challenges. ©The authors ©Springer. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Library Instruction and Research Training in the Context of Artificial Intelligence(Elsevier, 2024) ;Ortiz-Díaz, Erik M ;César Saavedra-alamillas ;Josmel Pacheco-mendozaYouness El HamzaouiThe librarian has played a crucial role throughout history, evolving from a guardian of humanity׳s collective memory to guiding the use of collections and, in recent years, a trainer in the use of information and emerging digital technologies. Currently, the librarian is an active collaborator who understands scientific communication processes and the mechanisms for improving high-impact academic production.62 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Innovation as a practice: Why automation will not kill innovation(2023) ;Redín, Dulce M. ;Cabaleiro-Cerviño, Goretti ;Rodriguez-Carreño, IgnacioAs a result of contemporary culture’s focus on continuous innovation and “change before you have to,” innovation has been identified with economic gains rather than with creating added value for society. At the same time, given current trends related to the automation of business models, workers seem all but destined to be replaced by machines in the labor market. In this context, we attempt to explore whether robots and Artificial Intelligence (AI) will be able to innovate, and the extent to which said activity is exclusively inherent to human nature. Following the need for a more anthropological view of innovation, we make use of MacIntyrean categories to present innovation as a domain-relative practice with creativity and practical wisdom as its corresponding virtues. We explain why innovation can only be understood within a tradition as it implies participating in inquiry about the principle and end of practical life. We conclude that machines and “intelligent” devices do not have the capacity to innovate and they never will. They may replicate the human capacity for creativity, but they squarely lack the necessary conditions to be a locus of virtue or engage with a tradition. Copyright © 2023 Redín, Cabaleiro-Cerviño, Rodriguez-Carreño and Scalzo.Scopus© Citations 1 18 2
