EDINBURGH is the most AI-ready city in the UK, according to results from a recent study.
Scotland’s capital scored highest outside London in the SAS AI Cities Index 2023, which reveals the cities that are most likely to benefit from a growing commercial appetite for artificial intelligence (AI).
The recent study compared the digital talent pool, funding support, university course offerings, and job availability between the UK’s cities, with Edinburgh coming out top.
Scotland’s largest city, Glasgow, also featured in the top 10 at number eight.
The index, compiled by AI and analytics specialist SAS, found that Edinburgh beat popular tech hub Cambridge, and was crowned the city most likely to benefit engaging with AI.
To reveal the cities leading the way in AI in improving skills and innovation, SAS looked at seven indicators.
These included the number of AI companies in the city; the number of AI-related jobs currently advertised; AI-related events; average life satisfaction of residents and the number of university courses which feature AI as part of the module.
SAS gave every city and borough an index score for each separate data point, adding up each score over the data points to calculate an overall score out of 700.
Edinburgh was home to the highest number of courses that feature an AI element, after SAS combed through every course offered in UK universities to understand how AI is used in tech-based and non tech-based degrees.
Immersing students in AI will prepare them for this ever-growing industry, with a crucial understanding of how to use and navigate the fresh technology.
AI is currently transforming industries such as healthcare, education, finance and manufacturing, and has the potential to contribute billions of pounds to the UK’s GDP and increase it by 7% over a decade.
In healthcare, artificial intelligence can speed up diagnoses, drug discovery, and even help improve patient flow through hospitals.
For manual processing tasks, AI and cloud analytics can be used to quickly analyse data, reducing the need for office workers to spend hours manually sorting through data.
The University of Edinburgh also recently released research that could be “transformational” in improving heart attack diagnosis, using an algorithm developed from AI.
AI is penetrating our everyday lives through streaming services which use AI to suggest what we should watch next, smartphones use it to help us unlock our phones with our faces, and AI is used by banks to help detect fraud.
Universities in Edinburgh are also pioneering the frontier of AI – InnovateUK has awarded multiple grants worth millions of pounds to research projects at the University of Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt and Edinburgh Napier.
Popular tech hubs Cambridge and Oxford came in second and third due to their landscape for AI career opportunities, institutions based in the city and high life satisfaction, too.
The analysis also revealed which parts of the UK have seen the biggest growth in AI-readiness since the 2022 index was published last year.
Newry, in Northern Ireland, came last in 2022, but has since risen from 74 to 25, a huge jump of 49 places.
Leicester has also jumped from position 50 in 2022 to 13 in 2023, nearing the top 10.
Inverness, Norwich and Wells all also made huge gains, a sign that the cities and their councils have implemented a number of actions to overhaul their AI-ready efforts.
However, the study has also shown which parts of the UK seem least prepared to utilise AI to its full potential – bottom of the list was Chichester, followed by Bangor and Dundee.
The study also compared the AI-readiness of all London boroughs, revealing that Hillingdon, home to Heathrow Airport, came first, beating the usual suspects of Camden and Westminster. Kensington and Chelsea came last.
Glyn Townsend, Senior Director of Education Services at SAS EMEA said:“The UK has a goal to become a science and technology superpower by 2030.
“But as the industry grows at pace and generates thousands of jobs, who fills them when we’re in the midst of the digital skills gap?
“TechUK has reported that over half of UK firms identify accessing talent as their biggest challenge over the next 12 months.
“More and more careers require an element of data literacy, and so educators need to be well-versed in teaching people how to incorporate this into their subject areas along with, where necessary, data analytics and AI elements.
“All cities – not just those that are the largest or most populated – need to be able to build, test and implement AI technologies.
“They need to create an ecosystem between institutions, research and commercial applications to develop and deploy future technology.
“While some cities have made huge gains since last year, our research still highlights large discrepancies between the most and least-prepared areas.
“Beyond just the digital and data literacy that some cities lack, there needs to be investment in regional AI Centres of Excellence and Incubation Hubs for new and emerging technology to fuel the future economy.”