Many Worlds of AI: Conference Proceedings
You can look for particular papers/abstracts using the search box above. You can see the full list of suggested hashtags, denoting different stakeholder groups, specific countries, as well as specialists themes, here.
Imagining AI and a Prospective Metaverse: A Participatory Speculative Design Case Study from Japan and Reflections from Germany
by Michel Hohendanner (Munich University of Applied Sciences) and Chiara Ullstein (Technical University of Munich)
Operationalizing decolonial AI through Ethics-as-a-Service
by 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)
Cross-Cultural Narratives and Imaginations of Weaponised Artificial Intelligence: Comparing France, Japan, and the United States
by Ingvild Bode, Hendrik Huelss, Anna Nadibaidze (University of Southern Denmark) and Tom Watts (Royal Holloway, UofL)
Book launch and Discussion: Imagining AI: How the World Sees Intelligent Machines
by Kanta Dihal (Imperial College London/LCFI Cambridge), Hirofumi Katsuno, PhD (Doshisha University) and Anzhelika Solovyeva, PhD (Charles University)
ΑΠΟαποικιοΠΟΙΗΣΗ: Decolonising Cypriot AI through poetry
by Alexia Achilleos (CYENS Centre of Excellenece & Cyprus University of Technology), Spyros Armostis (University of Cyprus), Eleftheria Sokratous (Ypogia Skini)
Post-modern dance performance and a group conversation about responsible design and social impact of AI
by Betsy Campbell (Edgelands Institute)
Human First Innovation for AI ethics? : a Cross-cultural Perspective on Youth and AI
by Toshie Takahashi (Waseda University)
Exploring Children's Rights and Child-Centred AI
by Janis Wong, Morgan Briggs, Mhairi Aitken, Sabeehah Mahomed (Turing Institute)
Artificial Intelligence in National Media: How the North-South Divide Matters?
by Claudia Wladdimiro Quevedo (Uppsala University)
Contentious Others: Logo and Dilemmas of Difference in the US, Britain, and France
by Apolline Taillandier (University of Cambridge and University of Bonn)
Conceptions of Ethics in World-Making Machines: Colonial Iconographies of AI in Britain
by Peter Rees (We and I)
Praxis, or the Yugoslav Search for Man: Thinking and Human Self-Realization in the Age of Generative AI
by Ana Ilievska (Stanford University)
“Made in Europe”: exporting European values to the peripheries through the regulation of Artificial Intelligence - an exploratory analysis of the case of Morocco.
by Oumaima Hajri (Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences)