Europe was the fastest-growing region for machine learning hiring among airline companies in the three months ending March.
The number of roles in Europe is 17.2% of total machine learning jobs, up from 13.9% in the same quarter last year.
This was followed by the Asia-Pacific region, which saw a change of 3.2 percentage points on an annual basis in machine learning roles.
The figures are compiled by GlobalData, which tracks the number of new job postings from key companies in different sectors over time. With the help of text analysis, these job postings are then classified thematically.
GlobalData’s thematic approach to sectoral activities seeks to group key company information by topic to see which companies are best placed to withstand the disruptions coming into their industries.
These key topics, which include machine learning, have been chosen to cover “any issue that keeps the CEO awake at night”.
Tracking them in job postings allows us to see which companies are leading on specific issues and which are on the heels – and the important thing is where the market is expanding and shrinking.
Which countries have the highest growth in machine learning advertisements in the military industry?
The fastest growing country was India, which saw 1.3% of all machine learning ads in the three months ending March 2021, rising to 4.4% in the three months ending March this year.
This was followed by France (up 2.7 percentage points), the United Kingdom (2) and Canada (1.4).
The leading country for machine learning roles in the air force industry is the United States, which saw 71.3% of all advertised roles in the three months ending March.
Which cities are the largest centers for machine learning workers in the air force industry?
About 2.9% of all machine learning roles in the Air Force were advertised in Arlington, USA, in the three months ending March.
It is followed by Tucson (USA) with 2.9%, Orlando (USA) with 2.5% and Seattle (USA) with 2.4%.
https://www.airforce-technology.com/dashboards/jobs/europe-is-seeing-a-hiring-boom-in-air-force-industry-machine-learning-roles/