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24 Bonus Chapter 12: AI, the Future and You

Answer Key
    1. AI as a tool helps carry out tasks; AI as a compass tries to define direction and values — but only humans can set values.
    2. To trigger emotional responses that influence behavior (behavioral design, not just math).
    3. By analyzing nontraditional data (like rent or utility payments) it can approve more people, but it can also unfairly reject groups based on biased data.
    4. A robo-advisor automates portfolio management; the trade-off is convenience vs. lack of personal understanding.
    5. AI may push for maximum efficiency, but this can cause emotional burnout or make financial life feel restrictive.
    6. It means mistaking algorithmic recommendations for guaranteed safety, even though AI doesn’t know your personal context.
    7. They save “invisibly,” helping build funds, but users may not learn saving habits themselves.
    8. Because AI cannot eliminate risk — diversification protects against market and system failures.
    9. Algorithmic bias occurs when AI reflects historical inequalities, like penalizing certain ZIP codes or demographics.
    10. People without access to smartphones, internet, or financial literacy are excluded, widening inequality.
    11. Because AI suggestions need human evaluation; only critical thinking ensures alignment with values.
    12. Values guide whether decisions “make sense” for a person’s life; AI alone cannot account for meaning or cultural context.
    13. Independence may shift from “doing everything manually” to “choosing when to trust and when to override algorithms.”
    14. Reflection builds awareness of how the tool affected feelings, habits, and alignment with goals.
    15. “What kind of human do I want to be in the age of AI?”