Hupside has released a white paper providing a playbook for government, industry and investment leaders on how to use Hupchecker, an assessment tool designed to measure human originality in an artificial intelligence environment to help organizations achieve lasting value from AI adoption.
“AI transformation to this point has been driven by technology adoption,” Jonathan Aberman, co-founder and CEO of Hupside, said in a statement published Wednesday.
“We weren’t surprised by recent surveys that show most efforts are not generating demonstrable returns on investments. This is because AI transformation is not just about technology, but about targeting and training the people who can use it well. This requires a new metric to identify these people rapidly,” added Aberman.
What Is Hupchecker?
Hupchecker is Hupside’s software-as-a-service offering that measures human originality through an Original Intelligence Quotient, or OIQ.
According to the executive summary of Hupside’s white paper, “Successful AI Transformation: Using Original Intelligence,” OIQ can be measured against other individuals or against the output of one or more large language models.
The assessment tool is designed to help organizations establish AI-ready teams, customize training for employees and track the progress of AI transformation efforts by enabling users to map employee responses into an idea space and categorize them into archetypes, which help predict how an individual will approach problem solving.
According to the summary, Hupchecker identifies a person’s capacity for original thinking by determining the location of their output in an idea space. The tool offers a heatmap of potential and competencies in an AI-driven environment.
“AI is not a substitute for originality; it is a partner to it. The research behind our company shows that organizations combining AI efficiency with human originality will be the ones that thrive,” said Adam Green, co-founder and chief scientist of Hupside.
Hupside will publicly launch Hupchecker in mid-September. A private beta version of the assessment tool is available now.