Video archive
Archive with recordings of the seminar series Cross-Cultural Approaches to Desirable AI. The series was a collaboration between the Universities of Cambridge, Bonn, Tokyo and the University of Europe for Applied Sciences. It sought to bridge perspectives from the arts and sciences with a primary focus on supporting and developing research on AI and social justice, particularly from intersectional feminist and anti-racist perspectives.
Cross-Cultural Approaches to Desirable AI
Indigenous AI Ethics (06.11.24)
Wakanyi Hoffman, Utrecht University: Ubuntu 2.0. A Compatible Hybrid Intelligence for Human and Machine Co-Living.
Jahaziel Osei Mensah, University of Ghana/IWE: The Role of ‘Ukama’ Towards Environmental Sustainability in Africa.
Pius Mosima, Leiden University: Being Human in the Technological Age.
Amara Esther Chimakonam, University of Fort Hare: Towards Indigenous Ethical Principles for Artificial Intelligence.
Panel Chair: Christiane Schäfer, CST Bonn
Selfhood in the Era of AI (20.11.24)
Sunjin Oh, UTokyo: Rootless Signifiers: Does Signification Have a Chance in the Digital World?
Xinqi He, Rikkyo University: A post-humanist perspective on plagiarism in the era of AI.
Priya Mu, UTokyo: Embodied Self and the Creative Process.
Disability Studies , Health Justice, and AI (27.11.24)
Aisha Sobey, LCFI: The Hidden Expectations of Self-Tracking Apps: Who Really Benefits?
Amy Gaeta, LCFI: Diagnostic Advertisements: Social Media, Surveillance, and Targeted Heath Marketing .
Carolin Fleischer-Heininger, DIJ: Desirable AI for all: Approaching future technologies through a disability studies lens.
Panel Chair: Kerry McInerney, University of Cambridge
Data, Algorithms, and Mathematical Models (04.11.24)
Tobias Matzner, University of Paderborn: The Politics of Data and Algorithms.
The social and political implications of so called artificial intelligence are widely discussed in public discourses as well as academic circles. In both, the argument most often points at training data. Data are biased and systems that are trained on them take over these biases. Computer scientists sometimes state this a bit coarsely as "bullshit in, bullshit out". In the presentation, I want to discuss that this emphasis on data is not wrong, but too short. In a sense, data only become data (and thus biased data) when they are used by an algorithm. To show this, I will revisit the history of AI since the 1980s and detail how the concept of data changed from data as description of the world to data as material for algorithms. In consequence, I will point out how algorithms and data need to be considered as mutually related.
Panel Chairs: Jiré Emine Gözen & Iris Lorscheid, University of Europe
International Approaches to AI Governance (11.12.24)
Yulu Pi, LCFI: Human-Centric and Outcome-Focused Approaches to AI Governance and Compliance.
James Wright, UNESCO: UNESCO’s approach to AI ethics and governance.
Hiroki Habuka, Wadhwani AI Center: Japan's Approach to AI Regulation: Shaping the future of Human-Machine Interaction.
Panel Chair: Eleanor Drage, University of Cambridge
Sustainable AI in Social Context (18.12.24)
Chelsea Haramia, CST Bonn: Unsustainable AI and Global Ethical Inequality.
José Renato Laranjeira de Pereira, IWE Bonn: AI Policies and the Environment.
Tom Metcalf, IWE Bonn: Artificial Intelligence, Political Education, and the Sustainability of Democracy.
Panel Chair: Christiane Schäfer, CST Bonn
AI in Design and Designing AI (08.01.25)
Beate Hertwig & María Nenclares, University of Europe
This conversation explores the intersection of AI and design, focusing on how AI influences the creative design process and accessibility. In the first half, Beate Hertwig discusses AI's impact on creativity, examining in which ways will AI impact the creative process, along with examples from UX processes and group interactions. The second half, led by Maria, dives into the accessibility of AI tools, emphasizing inclusivity, equity, and democratization in technology in the context of desirable futures. A participatory approach will be encouraged throughout, inviting critical questions from the audience and fostering a dialogue between Beate and Maria. The session concludes with thoughts on the future of AI in design professions, addressing ethics and inclusivity.
Panel Chair: Jiré Emine Gözen, University of Europe
Digital Immortality (15.01.25)
Tomasz Hollanek, LCFI: Designing Deadbots: Human-AI Interaction in the Digital Afterlife Industry.
Katarzyna Nowaczyk-Basińska, LCFI: Imaginaries of Immortality in the Age of AI: An Intercultural Perspective.
Chihyung Jeon, Graduate School of Science, Technology, and Policy of KAIST: Alive again, digitally: Resurrecting dead persons into virtual humans in South Korea.
Akito Orita, Kanto Gakuin University: Digital Data of the Deceased in Japan. Two Paradoxes of Preservation and Rejection.
Panel Chair: Stephen Cave, University of Cambridge
AI, Body, and Aesthetics (22.01.25)
Alyssa Yap, UTokyo: Desirable Images of the Healthy Human: From Medical Interventions to Generative AI Prompt Generation.
Grant Jun Otsuki, UTokyo: Towards a Post-Turing Typology of Machines.
Panel Chair: Ai Hisano, UTokyo