Many Worlds of AI

Date: 26-28 April 2023

Venue: Jesus College, University of Cambridge

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Detailed Agenda

(In British Summer Time, GMT+1)

[Zoom links to join the conference remotely will be shared directly with registered participants]

DAY 1: Wednesday, 26 April

9:00 am – Welcome: Dr Stephen Cave, Director of LCFI, University of Cambridge

Session 1: Fundamental Questions

Venue: Frankopan Hall

9:30 am - Panel 1: Common Vocabularies (Chair: Professor Maurizio Ferraris)

Presentations:

  • To Build “Fairer AI”, First Thoroughly Understand “Fairness”: A Multidisciplinary Review Through an Intercultural Lens - Was Rahman (Coventry University)

  • Towards a Praxis for Intercultural Ethics in Explainable AI - Chinasa T. Okolo (Cornell University)

  • Automating Desire: Laws of sex robotics in the US and South Korea - Michael Thate (Princeton University and Northwestern Pritzker School of Law)

[abstracts and author bios]

10.30 am - Tea/ Coffee Break

11.00 am - Panel 2: Shared Policies? (Chair: Professor Jocelyn Maclure)

Presentations:

  • Emerging policy landscape around AI in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa - Amber Sinha (Policy Data Institute, Kampala and Mozilla Foundation)

  • “Made in Europe”: exporting European values to the peripheries through the regulation of Artificial Intelligence - an exploratory analysis of the case of Morocco - Oumaima Hajri (Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences)

  • AI Regulation in Brazil: National Knowledge or Foreign Appropriation? - Marina Garrote (Brasil Research Association and University of São Paulo), Paula Guedes (Catholic University of Portugal) and Bruno Bioni (Data Privacy Brasil Research Association and Brazilian Data Protection Authority)

[abstracts and author bios]

12.00 pm - Panel 3: Accounting for AI Harms (Chair: Dr Kanta Dihal)

Presentations:

  • AI Colonialism - Karen Hao (Pulitzer Centre)

  • A taxonomy of AI-mediated epistemic injustices – Suvradip Maitra (University of Melbourne)

  • Can the Ghost Worker Speak? De-colonializing Digital Labor – Sergio Genovesi (University of Bonn)

[abstracts and author bios]

1.00 pm – 2.00 pm: Lunch Break

Session 2: Many worlds…

Venue: Frankopan Hall | Parallel Venue: Bawden Room

2.00 pm – Panel 4: African AI (Chair: Tonii Leach)

Presentations:

  • Artificial Intelligence, Data Capitalism, and Bioethics in Sub-Sahara Africa - Golden Lwando Mwinsa, Frances Griffiths, and Benjamin Ferguson (University of Warwick)

  • AI, Journalism, and the Ubuntu Robot in Sub-Saharan Africa: A quest for a normative framework – Greg Gondwe (California State University - San Bernardino and Institute for Social Media Rebooting, Harvard)

  • African world of AI: a people-centered approach to responsible AI – Makouchi Sam Nkwo (University of Namibia), Annastasia Shipepe (University of Namibia), Shaimaa Lazem (City of Scientific and Technological Applications) Anicia Peters (University of Namibia)

[abstracts and author bios]

2.00 pm (Parallel Session) – Panel 7: Alternative histories of AI in Europe and the Anglophone West (Chair: Christiane Schäfer)

Presentations :

  • Praxis, or the Yugoslav Search for Man: Thinking and Human Self-Realization in the Age of Generative AI – Ana Ilievska (Stanford University)

  • Conceptions of Ethics in World-Making Machines: Iconographies of AI in Ireland and the UK – Peter Rees (We and I)

  • Contentious Others: Logo and Dilemmas of Difference in the US, Britain, and France – Apolline Taillandier (University of Cambridge and University of Bonn)

[abstracts and author bios]

3.00 pm - Panel 5: AI Cultures in MENA (Chair: Dr Audrey Borowski)

Presentations :

  • AI Projects in the Gulf Region and their Ethical Questions: An Analytical Overview – Ala Al-Fuqaha (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)

  • Islamic Ethical Discourse on AI: Three Challenges in Focus – Mohammed Ghaly (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)

  • Developing a Legal Framework for AI in Qatar and Beyond – Barry Solaiman (Hamad Bin Khalifa University and Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar)

  • Lost History and overlooked Present: Mechanical and Artificial Intelligence in Arabic culture - Reham Hosny (The University of Cambridge/ Minia University)

[abstracts and author bios]

3.00 pm (Parallel Session) - Panel 8: AI Histories in India (Chair: Dr Maya Indira Ganesh)

Presentations :

  • Taking off with ease or Face-off with Justice? Mapping Digital Citizenship and ‘Ways of Seeing’ the Indian Biometric State - Madhavi Shukla (Jawaharlal Nehru University)

  • Data power, AI and the "doubtful citizens": The case of India's National Population Register – Anirban Mukhopadhyay (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)

  • Palmistry , Predictive Analytics and Imprints of Colonized Bodies - Charu Maithani (University of New South Wales)

  • The Digital Afterlives of Brahminical Colonialism: Biometric Surveillance, Facial Recognition Technology, & AI Ethical Complicities in India, 1858-2022 – Nikhil Dharmaraj (Harvard College)

[abstracts and author bios]

4.00 pm - Tea/ Coffee Break

4.30 pm - Panel 6: Confronting AI at the Margin: Conflicts around Faith, Hope, and Identity in Bangladesh (Chair: Abdullah Hasan Safir)

Panel Discussants:

  • Sharifa Sultana (Cornell University and Facebook Fellow)

  • Mohammad Rashidujjaman Rifat (University of Toronto and Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society)

  • Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed (University of Toronto)

[abstract and author bios]

4.30 pm (Parallel Session) - Panel 9: Contemporary China and AI (Chair: Dr Kerry McInerney)

Presentations :

  • A community-of-practice approach to understanding Chinese policymaking on AI ethics – Guangyu Qiao-Franco (University of Radboud and University of Southern Denmark

  • From Accuracy to Alignment: The Practical Logic of ‘Trustworthy AI’ among Chinese Radiologists – Wanheng Hu (Cornell University/Harvard University)

  • AI Ethics and Governance in China: from Principles to Practice – Rebecca Arcesati (Mercator Institute for China Studies)

[abstracts and author bios]

Art Performances and Presentations

Venue: Frankopan Hall

5:30 pm (Chair: Dr Stephen Cave)

  • Post-modern dance performance and a group conversation about responsible design and social impact of AI – Betsy Campbell (Edgelands Institute)

  • ΑΠΟαποικιοΠΟΙΗΣΗ: Decolonising Cypriot AI through poetry – Alexia Achilleos (CYENS Centre of Excellenece & Cyprus University of Technology), Spyros Armostis (University of Cyprus), Eleftheria Sokratous (Ypogia Skini)

  • Cultural Memory: Artistic Experiments in AI – Yasmine Boudiaf (Royal Society of Arts and the Ada Lovelace Institute)

[abstracts and author bios]

6:45 pm - FINISH

7.00 pm – Conference Dinner (by invitation only)

DAY 2: Thursday, 27 April

Session 3: Many worlds… (contd.)

Venue: Frankopan Hall

9:30 am - Panel 10: In search of new fundamentals (Chair: Professor Alan Blackwell)

Presentations:

  • Korean value of ‘jeong’ - Robert M Geraci and Yong Sup Song (Manhattan College; Youngnam Theological Seminary)

  • The Five Tests: Designing and Evaluating AI According to Indigenous Māori Principles – Luke Munn (University of Queensland)

  • What would an anti-casteist AI system look like? - Shyam Krishna (Alan Turing Institute)

[abstracts and author bios]

10.30 am - Tea/ Coffee Break

11.00 am -Panel 11: Relational Philosophies and Ethical Diversity in the Intercultural Evolution of AI Ethics: A 'Disruptive' Conversation (co-organized with the Berggruen Center China)

Panelists:

  • Robin R Wang (Loyola Marymount University)

  • Peter D. Hershock (East-West Center)

  • Osamu Sakura (The University of Tokyo)

[Details]

12.00 pm - Panel 12: The Ethics of Digitization in India (co-organized with Ashoka University)

Moderator: Subhashis Banerjee (Ashoka University) and Jaspreet Bindra (TechWhisperer)

Panelists:

  • Malavika Raghavan (LSE)

  • Shirin Madon (LSE)

  • Amber Sinha (Mozilla Foundation)

[Details]

1.00 pm – 2.00 pm Lunch Break

Session 4: Practical Approaches

Venue: Frankopan Hall | Parallel Venue: Bawden Room

2.00 pm – Panel 13: Intercultural and Decolonial Approaches in Practice (Chair: Dr Chelsea Haramia)

Presentations:

  • Operationalizing decolonial AI through Ethics-as-a-Service – Saif Malhem (AI Future Lab), Daricia Wilkinson (Microsoft Research), Kathy Kim (Booz Allen Hamilton), Paul Sedille (Harvard Kennedy School and Stanford Graduate School of Business), Nupur Kohli (European Health Parliament)

  • Multicultural design and ubuntu ethics – Bev Townsend (University of York and University of KwaZulu-Natal), Bongi Shozi (University of California, San Diego and University of KwaZulu-Natal), Donrich Thaldar (University of KwaZulu-Natal).

  • How People Ethically Evaluate Facial Analysis AI. A cross-cultural study in Japan, Argentina, Kenya, and the United States - Severin Engelmann and Chiara Ullstein (Technical University of Munich)

[abstracts and author bios]

2.00 pm (Parallel Session) – Panel 15: NLP and Intercultural Ethics (Chair: Dr Eleanor Drage)

Presentations:

  • Building NLP models to teach local languages in Africa - Aderonke Busayo Sakpere (University of Ibadan) and Makuochi Samuel Nkwo (University of Namibia, Windhoek)

  • Critical Evaluation of AI-Powered Digital Dialogue Tools in Peacemaking: Insights from United Nations’ Digital Dialogues in Libya and Yemen – Ali Altiok (University of Notre Dame)

  • Towards Building a Gender-Inclusive Khaya AI for English← or →Twi Text Translator - Abigail Oppong (NLP Ghana)

[abstracts and author bios]

3.00 pm – Panel 14: Alternative Practices: New Datasets and Archives (Chair: Dr Miri Zilka)

Presentations:

  • Artificial intelligence as a decolonisation tool: Lessons from libraries, archives and museums - Maribel Hidalgo-Urbaneja (University of the Arts London) and Lise Jaillant (Loughborough University)

  • Sharp Image, Vague Face: Disrupting the Facial Transparency in A.I. through a Diasporic Approach – Yifeng Wei (National College of Art and Design, Ireland)

  • AI's Colonial Archives – Rida Qadri (Google), Huma Gupta (MIT); Katrina Sluis (ANU); Fuchsia Hart (Victoria and Albert Museum), Emily Denton (Google)

[abstracts and author bios]

3.00 pm (Parallel Session) - Panel 16: Alternative Practices: Design and Participation (Chair: Dr Dorian Peters)

Presentations:

  • Imagining AI and a Prospective Metaverse: A Participatory Speculative Design Case Study from Japan and Reflections from Germany – Michel Hohendanner (Munich University of Applied Sciences) and Chiara Ullstein (Technical University of Munich)

  • Imagining AI through participatory design in Nigeria, Brazil, and South Korea – Cornelius Onimisi Adejoro and Tom Yeh (University of Colorado Boulder)

  • Responsible Future-Making? Testing Intercultural AI Ethics through the Use of Generative Tools – Nikita Chiu (University of Exeter)

[abstracts and author bios]

4.00 pm - Tea/ Coffee Break

Workshops

Venue: Frankopan Hall | Parallel Venue: Bawden Room

4.30 pm - Workshop 1: Envisioning equitable representation in ML evaluation - Stevie Bergman (DeepMind), Willie Agnew (University of Washington), Maribeth Rauh (DeepMind)

[Details]

4.30 pm (Parallel Session) - Workshop 2: Provotypes for embodiment of value tensions across cultures - Dasha Simons (IBM)

[Details]

Keynote Lecture

Venue: Frankopan Hall

5:30pm - Keynote: Approaches to AI Ethics: “Sparks of Ideas” (Inspirations) from East Asian Philosophies

Speaker: Bing Song (Senior Vice President of the Berggruen Institute and Director of the Institute’s China Center)

7:00pm - FINISH

DAY 3: Friday, 28 April

Session 5: Just AI Futures

Venue: Elena Hall | Parallel Venue: Bawden Room

9:30 am - Panel 17: AI and the Planetary (Chair: Dr Tomasz Hollanek)

Presentations:

  • Occupying Urgency: How AI Solutionism Shapes the Narrating of Urgency around the Climate Crisis – Eugenia Stamboliev and Mark Coeckelbergh (University of Vienna)

  • An Approach Based in Eastern Philosophy to Identify Ethical Issues in Early Stages of AI for Earth Observation Research – Mrinalini Kochupillai (Technical University of Munich)

  • AI for Datong: A Normative Framework for Sustainable AI - Pak-Hang Wong (Independent)

[abstracts and author bios]

9:30 am (Parallel Session) - Panel 19: Many Stories of AI (Chair: Dr Jan Voosholz)

  • Presentations: Media coverage of AI in Sweden and Chile – Claudia Wladdimiro Quevedo (Uppsala University)

  • Narratives of weaponised AI: France, Japan, the US - Ingvild Bode, Hendrik Huelss, Anna Nadibaidze (University of Southern Denmark) and Tom Watts (Royal Holloway, UofL)

  • Responsible AI reporting requires cross-border collaboration – Boyoung Lim (Pulitzer Centre)

[abstracts and author bios]

10:30 am - Tea/ Coffee Break

11.00 am - Panel 18: Sustainability of AI (Chair: Charlotte Bander)

Panel Discussants:

  • Şebnem Yardımcı Geyikçi(University of Bonn)

  • Tijs Vandemeulebroucke (University of Bonn)

  • Larissa Bolte (University of Bonn)

  • Sophia Falk (University of Bonn)

[abstract and author bios]

11.00 am (Parallel Session) - Panel 20: AI with/for the Youth and the Elderly (Chair: Dr Rune Nyrup)

  • Exploring Children's Rights and Child-Centred AI – Janis Wong, Morgan Briggs, Mhairi Aitken, Sabeehah Mahomed (Turing Institute)

  • Human First Innovation for AI ethics? : a Cross-cultural Perspective on Youth and AI – Toshie Takahashi (Waseda University)

  • (Old) age in the age of artificial intelligence – crossing generational borders in AI research and development – Justyna Stypinska (Weizenbaum Institute)

[abstract and author bios]

12.00 pm – Book launch and Discussion: Imagining AI: How the World Sees Intelligent Machines (Chair: Dr Stephen Cave)

Venue: Elena Hall

  • Imagining Decolonial AI: Dr Kanta Dihal (Imperial College London/LCFI Cambridge)

  • Engineering Robots with Heart in Japan: The Politics of Cultural Difference in Artificial Emotional Intelligence: Hirofumi Katsuno, PhD (Doshisha University)

  • The Russian Imaginary of Robots, Cyborgs and Intelligent Machines: Anzhelika Solovyeva, PhD (Charles University)

[Details]

1.00 pm – 2.00 pm: Lunch Break

Conclusion

2.00 pm – Concluding Remarks: Human co-becoming in the age of AI

Prof. Markus Gabriel, Director of CST, University of Bonn

Venue: Elena Hall

3.00 pm – Finish