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The Growing Symbiosis Between RPA and AI

By: Karen Astley, Vice President, APAC, Appian.


Given their inherent similarities, it’s entirely logical that robotic process automation (RPA) and artificial intelligence (AI) would have crossover in a variety of different contexts. Both of these technologies are contingent upon bringing order to processes – usually workflows, in either the physical or digital realm – that might otherwise run the risk of falling into disorder for any number of reasons, most notably human error. RPA and AI are perfectly capable of operating on their own, and in fact often do. Yet recent evidence suggests systems in which the two automation-focused methods work together may become increasingly common in the not-too-distant future and add increased value to the organisation

Organisations considering implementing one or the other to manage any of their operations would serve themselves well by examining how they’re being used in tandem. It’s also worth investigating how a versatile low-code business application development platform  or dynamic case management software may be ideal for creating solutions to most successfully leverage symbiotic RPA and AI.

The crossing paths of RPA and AI

It’s often easier for most organisations to implement RPA in advance of AI, especially in instances where they are still reliant to some degree on legacy systems: hardware, software or both. Complete overhauls of companies’ existing tools for business process management in favour of more advanced technologies are quite difficult, as they can’t be accomplished quickly – and, in some instances, aren’t realistic at all. The better approach, then, is to use the addition of something like RPA as a table-setter for more substantive changes to operating methods.

With that being said, the increasing frequency with which RPA and AI are coming as a package deal means business process management (BPM) advancements or overhauls won’t be quite as complex to manage in the next few years. AI-enhanced RPA platforms that automate various organisational workflows and processes either in whole or in part, referred to as CPRA – cognitive robotic process automation – are gradually becoming the norm, in yet another example of how truly pervasive digital transformation has become across multiple segments of both the public and private sectors.

RPA-AI hybrid solutions in the pharmaceutical industry

Without a doubt, the business of pharmaceutical development and production is one of the most highly regulated sectors in the world, in no small part because it’s characterised by numerous complex processes. One mistake in the chemical formulation of a particular drug – or a flaw in the physical steps of manufacturing tablets, capsules, liquids or other forms of medication – can lead to illnesses and even deaths among users, which can open up the drug company that is responsible to a surfeit of civil or even criminal penalties, in addition to various regulatory sanctions. Because of this, it’s of the utmost importance for pharmaceutical businesses to implement numerous fail-safes in their BPM practices, and the combination of RPA and AI can help provide these precautionary measures.

It's been reported that major companies in this field may well consider this path in light of the success recently seen by AstraZeneca, one of the world’s biggest pharmaceutical producers, when it commissioned the services of Deloitte in pursuit of an RPA implementation. While this would by no means be the first time that an organisation within the general sphere of health care adopted RPA, CRPA, AI or some combination thereof, no one in the pharmaceutical field had tried using such technologies to handle the specific task of “adverse event reports.” Other pharma businesses might use a different term for these filings, but the meaning is likely the same: reports of detrimental side effects in patients who have used a particular drug.

AstraZeneca receives an average of 100,000 adverse event reports each year – many documenting minor ailments but some detailing serious illnesses. Before the firm enlisted a major business solutions provider to devise an advanced RPA system for this purpose, it dealt with these reports manually. As such, members of the AstraZeneca patient safety team were spending millions of hours every year personally administering whatever tasks were necessary to ensure patients’ adverse experiences were dealt with appropriately. Because individuals’ health is at stake in such cases, care and sensitivity are essential – not to mention the initiation of any adjustments that can be made to the drug – but certain routine administrative processes could be (and were) automated through the RPA platform.

It was noted that this RPA use case was a considerable success, bolstering response rates from both health care professionals involved in drug trials and AstraZeneca staff. Although similar solutions will have to undergo rigorous compliance testing via computer systems validation, as this one did, high-level CRPA application platforms will likely be adopted more broadly throughout the sector.

The pharmaceutical industry also stands to gain a lot from complementing these CRPA platforms with dynamic case management technology for adverse event reports. With the absolute deluge of electronic data generated today and the multiple processes that typically must be managed for any particular adverse event report, if you’re not using modern technology to enable your staff, the decisions they’re making are incomplete, inaccurate, or putting people’s health at risk. Utilising a modern and flexible case management platform that integrates data, process, mobility, social collaboration and content management in a single location is the key to accelerating intelligent decisions and turning them into rapid action for successful responses to adverse event reports.

Driving advances in voice-activated assistants

According to a January 2018 study conducted by Capgemini, 24 percent of surveyed individuals stated that they would, given the opportunity, use voice-activated digital assistants or chatbots to complete various purchases rather than doing so through direct interaction with a website. Additionally, the research found that Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, Apple’s Siri and IBM’s Watson, along with any other similar applications that will likely emerge in the next three years, will stake claims as a dominant channel of commerce for average consumers. Even if voice-activated assistants don’t quite reach heights that can be considered “dominance,” it’s practically a given that they’ll grow in popularity between now and 2021 or 2022, as their price points go down and they become accessible to a wider range of customers.

The symbiotic operation of RPA and AI grants these systems their effectiveness. An AI platform, as present in any of the aforementioned assistants, can generally understand a typical human question or command – “Siri, set a timer for two hours” – but an RPA cannot. Conversely, the AI can’t complete the nuts-and-bolts processes handled by the RPA. When combined, however, the AI translates the voice command into a series of simpler signals, sends them to the RPA as requests to locate relevant data packets, receives this data and finally converts it into a natural response: “Timer set for two hours,” and so on.

As RPA and AI develop further in the years to come, their capabilities will grow: AIs will potentially catch on to the slang and syntax of their users instead of requiring that questions be asked in formal sentences, while RPAs grow capable of collecting more complex requests based on prompts. As a result, their fusion can only bring about greater advances, in voice assistant technology and much, much more.


Benefiting the business and workers alike

It’s not uncommon for employees to fear that automation will marginalise or eliminate their jobs, but this is often not the case.

However, excited as you may be to implement united RPA and AI tools through your business, it’s critical that your staff have easy access to these functions and can fit them naturally into their individual workloads. Low-code application development platforms allow enterprises to quickly craft the sort of apps and portals that simplify the use of these advanced tools across the workforce and help employees leverage their benefits quickly and efficiently. Additionally, dynamic case management software helps to unify interactions between people, process, data, content with the use of these advanced tools, for faster and smarter decisions and responses.

To learn more about Appian RPA, click here.

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