MediSim VR’s Post

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As the India AI Impact Summit 2026 begins, the national conversation on Artificial Intelligence must move beyond prototypes and headlines to fundamentals: research intensity, compute capacity, institutional design, and long-term economic modelling. An article in ETGovernment by MediSim VR's COO and Co-founder, Adith Chinnaswami, co-authored with Tuhin A. Sinha, examines how investments in AI must be understood as productivity multipliers shaping India’s economic future. India’s Gross Expenditure on Research and Development stands at 0.64 percent of GDP, as noted in the Economic Survey 2025–26. While India’s rise in the Global Innovation Index from 81st in 2015 to 38th in 2025 reflects structural momentum, sustained AI leadership will require a decisive expansion in research intensity and translational capacity. The global AI race is no longer measured solely by patents and pilots. It is defined by compute infrastructure, governance frameworks, capital flows, and the ability to deploy innovation at population scale. As a health technology company operating at the intersection of immersive simulation, medical training, and AI-enabled systems, MediSim VR believes responsible AI deployment in high-stakes sectors such as healthcare must be anchored in safety, interoperability, and measurable socio-economic impact. India’s leadership in global AI governance, including its role in shaping inclusive frameworks through platforms such as the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence, signals that emerging economies are not passive adopters of technology. They are architects of scalable, cost-effective innovation models. The next decade of AI will be defined not merely by invention, but by disciplined execution and systemic integration. Link: https://lnkd.in/gNq2Z9b3

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