AI Research
This AI travel agent can plan your next trip’s entire itinerary – for free
Spending long hours in front of a computer screen trying to plan vacations could soon become a thing of the past.
The travel industry has enthusiastically embraced generative AI in recent years. Expedia, for example, integrated a ChatGPT-powered customer service chatbot into its app in early 2023. Kayak did something similar one year later, launching an AI platform trained on customer data and designed to provide personalized, real-time travel recommendations.
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Now, an up-and-coming player in the industry is aiming to take things one step further, using AI to automate every step of the trip-planning process, from brainstorming to booking, for free.
Launched in public beta in December, Airial Travel positions itself as an automated travel agent that helps users customize and plan travel itineraries based on their interests.
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Airial was founded by former engineers from Google, Meta, and Waymo, and leverages its proprietary AI model. The company has reportedly raised $3 million in seed funding.
However, Airial doesn’t have the market for end-to-end travel planning cornered because platforms like Mindtrip and Layla offer similar services.
How does it work?
Airial’s platform allows users to describe their travel goals using natural language. Like other AI chatbots, the more specific your prompts, the easier it’ll be for the system to recommend something useful and tailored to your tastes. But you can also start broad, and the tool will help you narrow down your preferences.
For example, you might provide Airial’s AI assistant with the following description of your vague ambitions to travel this fall: “I’m taking two weeks off of work in October, and want to travel somewhere warm, and not too expensive. Maybe somewhere in the Mediterranean region or in the Caribbean. I also don’t want to be surrounded by too many tourists. Somewhere highly walkable would be ideal, too.”
It’ll then attempt to gain a better understanding of your interests, providing you with a few options to choose from, like “Beach relaxation” and “Cultural experiences.” You can also specify any specific activities you’d like to partake in while traveling.
Also: Anthropic launches new AI feature to build your own customizable chatbots
From there, Airial will provide a rough outline of an itinerary. (In response to the prompts outlined above, the bot suggested a three-city excursion across Italy and Croatia.) The platform also allows you to adjust for preferences like dietary restrictions, hotel star rating, and flight accommodations.
The chatbot also includes an “Instant Plan” option, which can be toggled on at the beginning of the conversation. This option will cause the chatbot to skip any follow-up questions to provide you with a suggested itinerary immediately.
To add an extra spark of motivation, the platform connects you with TikTok videos filmed in locations that are relevant to the details provided by your prompts.
Also: Why ads are coming to your favorite AI bots and you’ve only got yourself to blame
Aerial collects user data to customize travel itineraries, according to the company’s terms of service page.
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Radiomics-Based Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Approach for the Diagnosis and Prognosis of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis: A Systematic Review – Cureus
AI Research
A Real-Time Look at How AI Is Reshaping Work : Information Sciences Institute
Artificial intelligence may take over some tasks and transform others, but one thing is certain: it’s reshaping the job market. Researchers at USC’s Information Sciences Institute (ISI) analyzed LinkedIn job postings and AI-related patent filings to measure which jobs are most exposed, and where those changes are happening first.
The project was led by ISI research assistant Eun Cheol Choi, working with students in a graduate-level USC Annenberg data science course taught by USC Viterbi Research Assistant Professor Luca Luceri. The team developed an “AI exposure” score to measure how closely each role is tied to current AI technologies. A high score suggests the job may be affected by automation, new tools, or shifts in how the work is done.
Which Industries Are Most Exposed to AI?
To understand how exposure shifted with new waves of innovation, the researchers compared patent data from before and after a major turning point. “We split the patent dataset into two parts, pre- and post-ChatGPT release, to see how job exposure scores changed in relation to fresh innovations,” Choi said. Released in late 2022, ChatGPT triggered a surge in generative AI development, investment, and patent filings.
Jobs in wholesale trade, transportation and warehousing, information, and manufacturing topped the list in both periods. Retail also showed high exposure early on, while healthcare and social assistance rose sharply after ChatGPT, likely due to new AI tools aimed at diagnostics, medical records, and clinical decision-making.
In contrast, education and real estate consistently showed low exposure, suggesting they are, at least for now, less likely to be reshaped by current AI technologies.
AI’s Reach Depends on the Role
AI exposure doesn’t just vary by industry, it also depends on the specific type of work. Jobs like software engineer and data scientist scored highest, since they involve building or deploying AI systems. Roles in manufacturing and repair, such as maintenance technician, also showed elevated exposure due to increased use of AI in automation and diagnostics.
At the other end of the spectrum, jobs like tax accountant, HR coordinator, and paralegal showed low exposure. They center on work that’s harder for AI to automate: nuanced reasoning, domain expertise, or dealing with people.
AI Exposure and Salary Don’t Always Move Together
The study also examined how AI exposure relates to pay. In general, jobs with higher exposure to current AI technologies were associated with higher salaries, likely reflecting the demand for new AI skills. That trend was strongest in the information sector, where software and data-related roles were both highly exposed and well compensated.
But in sectors like wholesale trade and transportation and warehousing, the opposite was true. Jobs with higher exposure in these industries tended to offer lower salaries, especially at the highest exposure levels. The researchers suggest this may signal the early effects of automation, where AI is starting to replace workers instead of augmenting them.
“In some industries, there may be synergy between workers and AI,” said Choi. “In others, it may point to competition or replacement.”
From Class Project to Ongoing Research
The contrast between industries where AI complements workers and those where it may replace them is something the team plans to investigate further. They hope to build on their framework by distinguishing between different types of impact — automation versus augmentation — and by tracking the emergence of new job categories driven by AI. “This kind of framework is exciting,” said Choi, “because it lets us capture those signals in real time.”
Luceri emphasized the value of hands-on research in the classroom: “It’s important to give students the chance to work on relevant and impactful problems where they can apply the theoretical tools they’ve learned to real-world data and questions,” he said. The paper, Mapping Labor Market Vulnerability in the Age of AI: Evidence from Job Postings and Patent Data, was co-authored by students Qingyu Cao, Qi Guan, Shengzhu Peng, and Po-Yuan Chen, and was presented at the 2025 International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM), held June 23-26 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Published on July 7th, 2025
Last updated on July 7th, 2025
AI Research
SERAM collaborates on AI-driven clinical decision project
The Spanish Society of Medical Radiology (SERAM) has collaborated with six other scientific societies to develop an AI-supported urology clinical decision-making project called Uro-Oncogu(IA)s.
The initiative produced an algorithm that will “reduce time and clinical variability” in the management of urological patients, the society said. SERAM’s collaborators include the Spanish Urology Association (AEU), the Foundation for Research in Urology (FIU), the Spanish Society of Pathological Anatomy (SEAP), the Spanish Society of Hospital Pharmacy (SEFH), the Spanish Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SEMNIM), and the Spanish Society of Radiation Oncology (SEOR).
SERAM Secretary General Dr. MaríLuz Parra launched the project in Madrid on 3 July with AEU President Dr. Carmen González.
On behalf of SERAM, the following doctors participated in this initiative:
- Prostate cancer guide: Dr. Joan Carles Vilanova, PhD, of the University of Girona,
- Upper urinary tract guide: Dr. Richard Mast of University Hospital Vall d’Hebron in Barcelona,
- Muscle-invasive bladder cancer guide: Dr. Eloy Vivas of the University of Malaga,
- Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer guide: Dr. Paula Pelechano of the Valencian Institute of Oncology in Valencia,
- Kidney cancer guide: Dr. Nicolau Molina of the University of Barcelona.
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