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.
Responsible Future-Making? Testing Intercultural AI Ethics through the Use of Generative Tools
by Nikita Chiu (University of Exeter)
Concluding Remarks: Human co-becoming in the age of AI
by Prof. Markus Gabriel, Director of CST, University of Bonn
Workshop 2: Provotypes for Embodiment of Value Tensions across Cultures
Facilitated by Dasha Simons (IBM)
Workshop 1: Envisioning Equitable Representation in ML Evaluation
Facilitated by Stevie Bergman (DeepMind), Willie Agnew (University of Washington), Maribeth Rauh (DeepMind)
(Old) age in the age of artificial intelligence – crossing generational borders in AI research and development
by Justyna Stypinska (Weizenbaum Institute)
Occupying Urgency: How AI Solutionism Shapes the Narrating of Urgency around the Climate Crisis
by Eugenia Stamboliev and Mark Coeckelbergh (University of Vienna)
AI's Colonial Archives
by Rida Qadri (Google), Huma Gupta (MIT); Katrina Sluis (ANU); Fuchsia Hart (Victoria and Albert Museum), Emily Denton (Google)
Sharp Image, Vague Face: Disrupting the Facial Transparency in A.I. through a Diasporic Approach
by Yifeng Wei (National College of Art and Design, Ireland)
Artificial intelligence as a decolonisation tool: Lessons from libraries, archives and museums
by Maribel Hidalgo-Urbaneja (University of the Arts London) and Lise Jaillant (Loughborough University)
Exposing AI as a World Object through Interdisciplinarity: The Case of Sustainable AI
Panel Discussion: Şebnem Yardımcı Geyikçi(University of Bonn), Tijs Vandemeulebroucke (University of Bonn), Larissa Bolte (University of Bonn) and Sophia Falk (University of Bonn)
Can the Ghost Worker Speak? De-colonializing Digital Labor
by Sergio Genovesi (University of Bonn)
Towards a Praxis for Intercultural Ethics in Explainable AI
by Chinasa T. Okolo (Cornell University)