January 20, 2026
Philip Morris International Opens Dialogue on the Future of Human Cognition as a Defining Frontier in the Age of AI
The paper calls for global debate to ensure AI enhances—rather than diminishes—uniquely human strengths in an increasingly automated world
The white paper explores how human capabilities such as - critical thinking, creativity and adaptability - are poised to become the “superskill” of the future, driving progress in an era of human-machine collaboration. As AI automates routine tasks and augments knowledge work, PMI argues that nurturing and protecting cognitive capacity will be essential for organizations seeking to remain resilient and relevant. Where once technology often automated labor-intensive jobs in the quest to improve productivity, now, as intelligent systems take on more cognitive work, organizations must rethink how they develop and protect the human mind itself.
“In our strategic shift toward a smoke-free future, we learned that technology helps us move faster - but real progress depends on people. Change isn’t just about scientific and technological advances; it’s about vision, ambition, and how people apply innovations. A decade ago, we were a cigarette company, and now our smoke-free products are available in 100 markets and account for 41% of our net revenuesi,” said
The white paper highlights the need to protect human cognition in the era of AI, outlining a set of accelerating cognitive risks that will shape whether society benefits from AI or becomes overwhelmed by it:
- Cognitive atrophy: As generative AI increasingly automates ideation, drafting, and analysis, people risk losing the “productive struggle” that once strengthened deep thinking, originality, and independent judgment. When machines do more of the mental heavy lifting, human cognitive muscles can quietly weaken.
- Attention erosion: An always on digital environment - notifications, feeds, dashboards, and synthetic content - fragments focus and pull people into shallow processing. This erosion of sustained attention undermines decision quality, critical reasoning, and the ability to engage with complex problems.
- The emerging cognitive divide: Access to time, focus, and advanced learning is becoming uneven. As cognitive demands rise, these advantages increasingly risk becoming privileges. Without intervention, socioeconomic divides could harden into a cognitive inequality gap, determining who can thrive in an AI-mediated world.
- Trust and verification challenges: The proliferation of synthetic media and deepfakes threatens public confidence in information itself. Navigating this landscape requires new habits of verification, lateral reading, and digital skepticism - skills that are becoming foundational to civic participation and organizational decision-making.
PMI’s commitment to fostering dialogue on these issues reflects the reality that today it is a changed company, as the company pursues a vision of a smoke-free future and invests in continuous learning and new capabilities for its workforce, aiming to be predominantly smoke-free by 2030.
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View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260120387521/en/
T. +41 (76) 394 4566
E. radoslav.hristov@pmi.com
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