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.
How People Ethically Evaluate Facial Analysis AI: A cross-cultural study in Japan, Argentina, Kenya, and the United States
by Severin Engelmann and Chiara Ullstein (Technical University of Munich)
Intercultural AI: Exchange, Dialogue, and Conflict
by Cornelius Onimisi Adejoro and Tom Yeh (University of Colorado Boulder)
Towards Building a Gender-Inclusive Khaya AI for English⇔Twi Text Translator
by Abigail Oppong (NLP Ghana)
Building NLP models to teach local languages in Africa
by Aderonke Busayo Sakpere (University of Ibadan) and Makuochi Samuel Nkwo (University of Namibia, Windhoek)
Multicultural Design and Ubuntu Ethics
by 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)
African world of AI: a people-centered approach to responsible AI
by Makouchi Sam Nkwo (University of Namibia), Annastasia Shipepe (University of Namibia), Shaimaa Lazem (City of Scientific and Technological Applications), and Anicia Peters (University of Namibia)
AI, Journalism, and the Ubuntu Robot in Africa: A quest for a normative framework
by Greg Gondwe (California State University - San Bernardino and Institute for Social Media Rebooting, Harvard)
Artificial Intelligence, Data Capitalism, and Bioethics in Sub-Sahara Africa
by Golden Lwando Mwinsa, Professor Benjamin Ferguson and Professor Frances Griffiths (University of Warwick)
Big Tech and its adversaries: Situating platform power within the geopolitical battle for data
by Amber Sinha (Policy Data Institute, Kampala and Mozilla Foundation)