Skip to main content
Official Logo of Columbia Business School
Academics
  • Visit Academics
  • Degree Programs
  • Admissions
  • Tuition & Financial Aid
  • Campus Life
  • Career Management
Faculty & Research
  • Visit Faculty & Research
  • Academic Divisions
  • Search the Directory
  • Research
  • Faculty Resources
  • Teaching Excellence
Executive Education
  • Visit Executive Education
  • For Organizations
  • For Individuals
  • Program Finder
  • Online Programs
  • Certificates
About Us
  • Visit About Us
  • CBS Directory
  • Events Calendar
  • Leadership
  • Our History
  • The CBS Experience
  • Newsroom
Alumni
  • Visit Alumni
  • Update Your Information
  • Lifetime Network
  • Alumni Benefits
  • Alumni Career Management
  • Women's Circle
  • Alumni Clubs
Insights
  • Visit Insights
  • Digital Future
  • Climate
  • Business & Society
  • Entrepreneurship
  • 21st Century Finance
  • Magazine
CBS AI Landing Image
AI@CBS
  • Latest on AI
  • Faculty Perspectives
    • All Perspectives
  • In the Classroom
    • AI Courses at CBS
  • Careers
  • Events
  • AI Research
  • In the News
  • More 

AI@CBS

Leading through intelligence—both human and artificial—at Columbia Business School.

Jump to main content

Committed to the Future of Artificial Intelligence

Through cutting-edge curricular innovation, our MBA, Executive MBA, MS, and PhD programs introduce new courses and research that seamlessly integrate AI into the student experience. From exploring the impact of AI across industries to developing hands-on experience with the latest tools, students can build confidence in using the latest tech in their chosen fields.

AI plays a critical role in the rapidly evolving modern workplace, and with a curriculum that emphasizes its societal and business implications, students can fully prepare to lead in this rapidly evolving landscape. Explore how our students, faculty, centers and programs are engaging with AI at Columbia Business School.

AI at Columbia Business School logo in blue lowercase letters with a plus above the i.

Latest on AI@CBS

Artificial Intelligence
Asset Management
Capital Markets and Investments
Finance and Economics
Future of Work
Leadership
The Workplace
Date
July 02, 2025
Blackstone’s Jon Gray, left, with CBS Senior Lecturer Brian Lancaster.
Artificial Intelligence
Asset Management
Capital Markets and Investments
Finance and Economics
Future of Work
Leadership
The Workplace

Blackstone’s Jon Gray on Strategic Discipline, AI, and Entrepreneurial Leadership

Jon Gray of Blackstone discusses investment discipline, AI-driven strategy, and leadership lessons with Columbia Business School. Learn how he built a culture of growth and innovation.
  • Read more about Blackstone’s Jon Gray on Strategic Discipline, AI, and Entrepreneurial Leadership about Blackstone’s Jon Gray on Strategic Discipline, AI, and Entrepreneurial Leadership
Algorithms
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Ethics and Leadership
Technology
Date
July 01, 2025
TikTok, Chinese video-sharing social networking service, with company logo on screen in background
Algorithms
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Ethics and Leadership
Technology

The Future of Leadership in Tech Ethics

Explore how Columbia Business School’s Tech Ethics course trains future executives to tackle AI, privacy, and misinformation dilemmas with practical ethical frameworks and real-world debates.
  • Read more about The Future of Leadership in Tech Ethics about The Future of Leadership in Tech Ethics
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Technology
Date
June 29, 2025
AI art
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Technology

Beyond the Machine: Why Human-Made Art Matters More in the Age of AI

New Columbia Business School research shows that AI-generated art doesn’t always diminish human creativity. When people see human-made art next to AI art, they value it more — by up to 62 percent.
  • Read more about Beyond the Machine: Why Human-Made Art Matters More in the Age of AI about Beyond the Machine: Why Human-Made Art Matters More in the Age of AI
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Future of Work
Management
The Workplace
Date
May 12, 2025
Walmart Chief People Officer Donna Morris
Artificial Intelligence
Business and Society
Digital Future
Future of Work
Management
The Workplace

Bizcast: Walmart’s Chief People Officer Donna Morris on the Future of Work

In this episode, Morris joins CBS Professor Stephan Meier to discuss how Walmart is building a resilient, tech-powered, and people-led workplace.

  • Read more about Bizcast: Walmart’s Chief People Officer Donna Morris on the Future of Work about Bizcast: Walmart’s Chief People Officer Donna Morris on the Future of Work
Explore More AI Insights
Faculty Perspectives on AI
Faculty Perspectives on AI Divider Image

Photo Image of Stephan Meier

Using AI to Enhance Human Motivation

Columbia Business School Professor Stephan Meier explains how leaders can calm AI-related concerns, while also creating value.

Quick Takes

  • AI can boost productivity and work-life balance through efficiency, but presents an equality paradox - potentially leveling the playing field or concentrating benefits among few while reducing overall jobs.
  • Future leaders (today's students) will determine AI's ultimate societal impact, making their understanding of these technologies crucial.
Watch the Video
Photo Image of Olivier Toubia

How to Leverage AI in the Workplace

Columbia Business School Professor Olivier Toubia shares the many upsides – and downsides – of AI in the workplace.

Quick Takes

  • Generative AI has dual potential - it can increase productivity and improve work-life balance while leveling the playing field, but could also increase inequality by limiting jobs to a select few and reducing overall opportunities.
  • The ultimate impact of AI on society and business will be determined by future leaders, making it critical for today's students to understand AI as they will shape its societal effects.
Watch the Video
Photo Image of Ashli Carter

Using Generative AI to Change Your Mindset

Ashli Carter, a lecturer at Columbia Business School, explains one of the ways she uses AI to help students build resilience.

Quick Takes

  • AI text-to-image generation helps people visualize their "inner critic" as a tool for negotiating with their mindset.
  • AI visualization processes can create mental states more conducive to achieving personal goals.
Watch the Video
Photo Image of Omar Besbes

How AI is Breaking Barriers in Business

Columbia Business School Professor Omar Besbes explains how AI is democratizing workplace productivity.

Quick Takes

  • AI will significantly enhance human productivity across various areas while potentially decreasing barriers to entry in multiple industries.
  • Chatbots and AI systems are democratizing access to resources while simultaneously putting the art of asking good questions and follow-up questions back at center stage.
Watch the Video
View More Faculty Perspectives on AI
AI@CBS In The Classroom
AI@CBS In The Classroom Divider Image
CBS Logo Icon Image

AI Tools

AI is integrated into our courses in ways that support student’s projects and inspire rich class discussions. Tools like ChatGPT are used to assist in breaking down complex research techniques, run business simulations, visualize data in real time, and to show students to think in new ways and explore innovative solutions.

View Available AI Tools at CBS
AI Icon Image

Courses

At Columbia Business School, we introduce you to the methods and tools that organizations around the world use to leverage data and artificial intelligence. You will learn how these techniques work, and how to use them. The curriculum spans everything from basic data analysis to generative AI, and contains classes suitable for all skill levels.

View Current AI Courses
Logo Icon Image

Resources

Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping industries worldwide, and higher education is no exception. Much like other transformative innovations before it, AI-powered language models have introduced new opportunities and challenges, changing the way students learn and how instructors teach.

Samberg Institute

At Columbia Business School, the Arthur J. Samberg Institute for Teaching Excellence serves as a guiding force in this ongoing transformation, equipping faculty with the knowledge, tools, and strategies they need to leverage generative AI for effective teaching.

View their website

Digital Future Initiative

The Digital Future Initiative focuses Columbia Business School’s world-class research and teaching on how technology is altering all industries and the fabric of daily life.

View their website

CBS Photo Image

Career Strategy

AI is changing the way we work, and the Career Management Center (Careers) at Columbia Business School has organized numerous AI-focused events and introduced AI-powered tools to help students and alumni adapt to these changes and achieve their long-term professional goals.

View AI@CBS Careers

Upcoming AI Events

See More AI Events
Faculty and AI Research
CBS Photo Image

AI@CBS Faculty

Dan Wang

Dan Wang

Lambert Family Professor of Social Enterprise in the Faculty of Business
Management Division
Co-Director of the Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Gita Johar

Gita Johar

Meyer Feldberg Professor of Business
Marketing Division
Daniel Guetta

Daniel Guetta

Professor of Professional Practice in the Faculty of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Director
Center for Pricing and Revenue Management and Business Analytics Initiative
Photo of Professor Carri Chan

Carri Chan

John A. Howard Professor of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Faculty Director Healthcare and Pharmaceutical Management Program
Healthcare and Pharmaceutical Management Program
Oded Netzer

Oded Netzer

Arthur J. Samberg Professor of Business
Marketing Division
Vice Dean for Research
Dean's Office
A. Carter

Ashli Carter

Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of Management in the Faculty of Business
Management Division
Omar Besbes

Omar Besbes

Vikram S. Pandit Professor of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division

Latest AI Research

Entrepreneurial Spillovers from Corporate R&D

Authors
Tania Babina and Sabrina Howell
Date
April 27, 2020
Format
Working Paper

This paper offers the first study of how changes in corporate R&D investment affect labor mobility. We document that increases in firm R&D have no measurable effect on employee mobility to other incumbent firms or on exit from employment, but do spur employee departures to join the founding teams of startups. These startups are more likely to be outside the R&D-investing employer's industry, suggesting that the ideas moving via employees to startups would impose diversification costs on the parent.

Read More about Entrepreneurial Spillovers from Corporate R&D

Foundations and Trends in Machine Learning, A Tutorial on Thompson Sampling

Authors
Daniel Russo , Benjamin Van Roy, Abbas Kazerouni, Ian Osband, and Zheng Wen
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Working Paper

The multi-armed bandit problem has been the subject of decades of intense study in statistics, operations research, electrical engineering, computer science, and economics. A “one-armed bandit” is a somewhat antiquated term for a slot machine, which tends to “rob” players of their money. The colorful name for our problem comes from a motivating story in which a gambler enters a casino and sits down at a slot machine with multiple levers, or arms, that can be pulled. When pulled, an arm produces a random payout drawn independently of the past.

Read More about Foundations and Trends in Machine Learning, A Tutorial on Thompson Sampling

Uniting the Tribes: Using Text for Marketing Insights

Authors
Jonah Berger, Ashlee Humphreys, Stephan Ludwig, Wendy Moe, Oded Netzer , and David Schweidel
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

Words are part of almost every marketplace interaction. Online reviews, customer service calls, press releases, marketing communications, and other interactions create a wealth of textual data. But how can marketers best use such data? This article provides an overview of automated textual analysis and details how it can be used to generate marketing insights. The authors discuss how text reflects qualities of the text producer (and the context in which the text was produced) and impacts the audience or text recipient.

Read More about Uniting the Tribes: Using Text for Marketing Insights

Speciesism: An Obstacle to AI and Robot Adoption

Authors
Bernd Schmitt
Date
January 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Letters

Once artificial intelligence (AI) is indistinguishable from human intelligence, and robots are highly similar in appearance and behavior to humans, there should be no reason to treat AI and robots differently from humans. However, even perfect AI and robots may still be subject to a bias (referred to as speciesism in this article), which will disadvantage them and be a barrier to their commercial adoption as chatbots, decision and recommendation systems, and staff in retail and service settings.

Read More about Speciesism: An Obstacle to AI and Robot Adoption

Pay, Employment, and Dynamics of Young Firms

Authors
Tania Babina , Wenting Ma, Christian Moser , Paige Ouimet, and Rebecca Zarutskie
Date
November 12, 2019
Format
Working Paper

Why do young firms pay less? Using confidential microdata from the US Census Bureau, we find lower earnings among workers at young firms. However, we argue that such measurement is likely subject to worker and firm selection. Exploiting the two-sided panel nature of the data to control for relevant dimensions of worker and firm heterogeneity, we uncover a positive and significant young-firm pay premium. Furthermore, we show that worker selection at firm birth is related to future firm dynamics, including survival and growth.

Read More about Pay, Employment, and Dynamics of Young Firms

Human or Robot? Consumer Responses to Radical Cognitive Enhancement Products

Authors
Noah Castelo, Bernd Schmitt , and Miklos Sarvary
Date
July 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

Human enhancement products allow consumers to radically enhance their mental abilities. Focusing on cognitive enhancements, we introduce and study a novel factor dehumanization (i.e., denying a person emotional ability and likening them to a robot) which plays a key role in consumers' reluctance to use enhancement products. In study 1, consumers who enhance their mental abilities beyond normal levels were dehumanized, whereas consumers who use the same products to restore lost abilities were not.

Read More about Human or Robot? Consumer Responses to Radical Cognitive Enhancement Products

Heterogeneity in HMMs: Allowing for Heterogeneity in the Number of States

Authors
Oded Netzer , Nicolas Padilla, and Ricardo Montoya
Date
June 1, 2019
Format
Working Paper

Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) have been widely used in marketing to study dynamics in customer behavior. HMMs have been successfully applied to model how customers transition among a set latent states such as attention levels, web search behavior, customer's relationships, and purchase intent. While most HMMs in marketing allow for heterogeneity in the model's parameters, these models assume that the number of latent states is common across customers.

Read More about Heterogeneity in HMMs: Allowing for Heterogeneity in the Number of States

Eliza in the Uncanny Valley: Anthropomorphizing Consumer Robots Increases Their Perceived Warmth but Decreases Liking

Authors
S.Y. Kim and Bernd Schmitt
Date
March 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Letters

Consumer robots are predicted to be employed in a variety of customer-facing situations. As these robots are designed to look and behave like humans, consumers attribute human traits to them—a phenomenon known as the “Eliza Effect.” In four experiments, we show that the anthropomorphism of a consumer robot increases psychological warmth but decreases attitudes, due to uncanniness. Competence judgments are much less affected and not subject to a decrease in attitudes.

Read More about Eliza in the Uncanny Valley: Anthropomorphizing Consumer Robots Increases Their Perceived Warmth but Decreases Liking

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Current page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 19
View More of our AI@CBS Faculty & Research
AI Faculty In the News
Photo Image of Todd Jick
Equality Now
December 1, 2023

Stalling At The Crossroads of Artificial Intelligence – The Time To Act Is Now

Center advisory board member S. Mona Sinha '93 co-wrote this piece on how the global consensus on AI safety and regulation should now focus on the Global Digital Compact (GDC) negotiations to blend human rights and quantifiable development principles.

View the Media Mention about Stalling At The Crossroads of Artificial Intelligence – The Time To Act Is Now
The New York Times
November 20, 2023

What Happens When a Founder Leaves?

What happens when the future of artificial intelligence relies on just one person? This New York Times article explores the surprising leadership changes at OpenAI, and raises important questions about the risks of a company depending too much on a single individual. 

Columbia Business School Professor of Business Patrick Bolton sheds light on this issue as he explains that OpenAI’s board may have underestimated the “key man risk”—the vulnerability a company faces when a pivotal leader is removed.

Mentioned Faculty

Patrick Bolton

Patrick Bolton

Barbara and David Zalaznick Professor Emeritus of Business and Professor Emeritus of Economics
Finance Division
Business Insider
November 2, 2023

Amazon and Shopify Sellers Are Using AI to Save Time, Better Understand Their Customers, and Improve Their Profit Margins

AI provides scale that isn’t possible with humans - but what about the downsides? In a 2023 article for Business Insider, Glaubinger Professor of Business Olivier Toubia highlights the cost-effectiveness of AI for Amazon and Shopify sellers. AI can be used to accomplish time-consuming tasks, Toubia says, such as writing product descriptions and optimizing copy for SEO. Is the efficiency of this technology, however, worth the risks? 

Mentioned Faculty

Photo of Prof. Olivier Toubia

Olivier Toubia

Glaubinger Professor of Business
Marketing Division
iHeart Radio
September 1, 2023

Decisions Over Decimals: Striking the Balance Between Intuition and Information

Become a confident leader and use data, experience, and intuition to drive your decisions

Agile decision making is imperative as you lead in a data-driven world. Amid streams of data and countless meetings, we make hasty decisions, slow decisions, and often no decisions. 

Mentioned Faculty

Oded Netzer

Oded Netzer

Arthur J. Samberg Professor of Business
Marketing Division
Vice Dean for Research
Dean's Office
Paul Magnone

Paul Magnone

Adjunct Professor of Business
Marketing Division
Photo of Christopher Frank

Christopher Frank

Adjunct Professor of Business
Marketing Division

Pagination

  • First page 1
  • Ellipsis …
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Current page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Ellipsis …
  • Last page 19

External CSS

Official Logo of Columbia Business School

Columbia University in the City of New York
665 West 130th Street, New York, NY 10027
Tel. 212-854-1100

Maps and Directions
    • Centers & Programs
    • Current Students
    • Corporate
    • Directory
    • Support Us
    • Recruiters & Partners
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Newsroom
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy & Policy Statements
Back to Top Upward arrow
TOP

© Columbia University

  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn