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AI & Society, Volume 37
Volume 37, Number 1, March 2022
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Actionable ethics. 1-7 - Mercedes Bunz, Marco Braghieri:
The AI doctor will see you now: assessing the framing of AI in news coverage. 9-22 - Bernd Carsten Stahl, Josephina Antoniou, Mark Ryan, Kevin Macnish, Tilimbe Jiya:
Organisational responses to the ethical issues of artificial intelligence. 23-37 - Simona Chiodo:
Human autonomy, technological automation (and reverse). 39-48 - Michael R. Scheessele:
The hard limit on human nonanthropocentrism. 49-65 - Antonin Descampe, Clément Massart, Simon Poelman, François-Xavier Standaert, Olivier Standaert:
Automated news recommendation in front of adversarial examples and the technical limits of transparency in algorithmic accountability. 67-80 - Donghee Shin:
How do people judge the credibility of algorithmic sources? 81-96 - Paul W. Burgess:
Algorithmic augmentation of democracy: considering whether technology can enhance the concepts of democracy and the rule of law through four hypotheticals. 97-112 - Orestis Papakyriakopoulos:
Political machines: a framework for studying politics in social machines. 113-130 - Malesela John Lamola:
The future of artificial intelligence, posthumanism and the inflection of Pixley Isaka Seme's African humanism. 131-141 - Bert Heinrichs:
Discrimination in the age of artificial intelligence. 143-154 - Jon Dron:
Educational technology: what it is and how it works. 155-166 - Marcus Smith, Seumas Miller:
The ethical application of biometric facial recognition technology. 167-175 - Marion Maisonobe:
The future of urban models in the Big Data and AI era: a bibliometric analysis (2000-2019). 177-194 - Fred Fonseca:
Data objects for knowing. 195-204 - Sylwia Wojtczak:
Endowing Artificial Intelligence with legal subjectivity. 205-213 - Andreas Tsamados, Nikita Aggarwal, Josh Cowls, Jessica Morley, Huw Roberts, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:
The ethics of algorithms: key problems and solutions. 215-230 - Nathan Colaner:
Is explainable artificial intelligence intrinsically valuable? 231-238 - Fabio Tollon:
Artifacts and affordances: from designed properties to possibilities for action. 239-248 - Lea Köstler, Ringo Ossewaarde:
The making of AI society: AI futures frames in German political and media discourses. 249-263 - Rashid Minhas, Camilla Elphick, Julia Shaw:
Protecting victim and witness statement: examining the effectiveness of a chatbot that uses artificial intelligence and a cognitive interview. 265-281 - Nader Ghotbi, Manh-Tung Ho, Peter Mantello:
Attitude of college students towards ethical issues of artificial intelligence in an international university in Japan. 283-290 - Stepán Cvik:
Categorization and challenges of utilitarianisms in the context of artificial intelligence. 291-297 - Ahmed Izzidien:
Word vector embeddings hold social ontological relations capable of reflecting meaningful fairness assessments. 299-318 - Martin Gibert, Dominic Martin:
In search of the moral status of AI: why sentience is a strong argument. 319-330 - Antonio Jiménez-Mavillard, Juan-Luis Suárez:
A computational approach for creativity assessment of culinary products: the case of elBulli. 331-353 - Simon Penny:
Sensorimotor debilities in digital cultures. 355-366 - Tatsuya Nomura, Motoharu Tanaka:
Experiences, knowledge of functions, and social acceptance of robots: an exploratory case study focusing on Japan. 367-374 - Mario Günther, Atoosa Kasirzadeh:
Algorithmic and human decision making: for a double standard of transparency. 375-381 - Caroline L. van Straten, Jochen Peter, Rinaldo Kühne, Alex Barco:
The wizard and I: How transparent teleoperation and self-description (do not) affect children's robot perceptions and child-robot relationship formation. 383-399 - Nidal Al Said, Khaleel M. Al-Said:
The effect of visual and informational complexity of news website designs on comprehension and memorization among undergraduate students. 401-409 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Nowotny, Helga (2021). In AI we trust: power, illusion and control of predictive algorithms, Polity, Cambridge, UK, ISBN-13: 978-1509548811. 411-414
Volume 37, Number 2, June 2022
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Autonomous reciprocity: context matters. 415-416 - Sofia Serholt, Sara Ljungblad, Niamh Ni Bhroin:
Introduction: special issue - critical robotics research. 417-423 - Marco Nørskov:
Robotification & ethical cleansing. 425-441 - Julia M. Hildebrand:
What is the message of the robot medium? Considering media ecology and mobilities in critical robotics research. 443-453 - Dafna Burema:
A critical analysis of the representations of older adults in the field of human-robot interaction. 455-465 - Arne Maibaum, Andreas Bischof, Jannis Hergesell, Benjamin Lipp:
A critique of robotics in health care. 467-477 - Aimee van Wynsberghe:
Social robots and the risks to reciprocity. 479-485 - Anna Dobrosovestnova, Glenda Hannibal, Tim Reinboth:
Service robots for affective labor: a sociology of labor perspective. 487-499 - Astrid Weiss, Katta Spiel:
Robots beyond Science Fiction: mutual learning in human-robot interaction on the way to participatory approaches. 501-515 - Nora Fronemann, Kathrin Pollmann, Wulf Loh:
Should my robot know what's best for me? Human-robot interaction between user experience and ethical design. 517-533 - Simon N. Balle:
Empathic responses and moral status for social robots: an argument in favor of robot patienthood based on K. E. Løgstrup. 535-548 - Petra Gemeinboeck, Rob Saunders:
Moving beyond the mirror: relational and performative meaning making in human-robot communication. 549-563 - Ceyda Yolgormez, Joseph Thibodeau:
Socially robotic: making useless machines. 565-578 - Ekaterina Pashevich:
Can communication with social robots influence how children develop empathy? Best-evidence synthesis. 579-589 - Stephen J. Cowley, Rasmus Gahrn-Andersen:
Drones, robots and perceived autonomy: implications for living human beings. 591-594 - Rasmus Gahrn-Andersen:
Seeming autonomy, technology and the uncanny valley. 595-603 - Frank Förster, Kaspar Althoefer:
Attribution of autonomy and its role in robotic language acquisition. 605-617 - Florian Sprenger:
Microdecisions and autonomy in self-driving cars: virtual probabilities. 619-634 - Garfield Benjamin:
Drone culture: perspectives on autonomy and anonymity. 635-645 - Jeffrey Benjamin White:
Autonomous reboot: Aristotle, autonomy and the ends of machine ethics. 647-659 - Jeffrey Benjamin White:
Autonomous Reboot: Kant, the categorical imperative, and contemporary challenges for machine ethicists. 661-673 - Charles Lassiter:
Could a robot flirt? 4E cognition, reactive attitudes, and robot autonomy. 675-686 - Rasmus Gahrn-Andersen, Stephen J. Cowley:
Autonomous technologies in human ecologies: enlanguaged cognition, practices and technology. 687-699 - Johan E. Ravn, Nils Brede Moe, Viktoria Stray, Eva Amdahl Seim:
Team autonomy and digital transformation. 701-710 - Kristin Wulff, Hanne O. Finnestrand:
It is like taking a ball for a walk: on boundary work in software development. 711-724 - Sylvi Thun, Ottar Bakås, Tore Christian Bjørsvik Storholmen:
Development and implementation processes of digitalization in engineer-to-order manufacturing: enablers and barriers. 725-743 - Aina Landsverk Hagen, Ingrid M. Tolstad, Arne Lindseth Bygdås:
"Magic through many minor measures": How introducing a flowline production mode in six steps enables journalist team autonomy in local news organizations. 745-759 - Abdallah Salameh, Julian M. Bass:
An architecture governance approach for Agile development by tailoring the Spotify model. 761-780 - Sut I Wong, Suzanne van Gils:
Initiated and received task interdependence and distributed team performance: the mediating roles of different forms of role clarity. 781-790 - Cian McCarroll, Federico Cugurullo:
Social implications of autonomous vehicles: a focus on time. 791-800 - Trond Haga:
Alienation in a digitalized world. 801-814
Volume 37, Number 3, September 2022
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Transformational AI: seeing through the lens of digital heritage and 'cybersyn'. 815-818 - Larry Stapleton, Lise Jaillant:
"Born digital" shedding light into the darkness of digital culture. 819-822 - Lise Jaillant, Annalina Caputo:
Unlocking digital archives: cross-disciplinary perspectives on AI and born-digital data. 823-835 - Kirsten Strigel Carter, Abby Gondek, William Underwood, Teddy Randby, Richard Marciano:
Using AI and ML to optimize information discovery in under-utilized, Holocaust-related records. 837-858 - Stephanie Decker, David A. Kirsch, Santhilata Kuppili Venkata, Adam Nix:
Finding light in dark archives: using AI to connect context and content in email. 859-872 - Todd Dobbs, Aileen Benedict, Zbigniew W. Ras:
Jumping into the artistic deep end: building the catalogue raisonné. 873-889 - Brenda O'Neill, Larry Stapleton:
Digital cultural heritage standards: from silo to semantic web. 891-903 - Noeleen Donnelly, Larry Stapleton, Jennifer O'Mahoney:
Born digital or fossilised digitally? How born digital data systems continue the legacy of social violence towards LGBTQI + communities: a case study of experiences in the Republic of Ireland. 905-919 - Lucy McKenna, Christophe Debruyne, Declan O'Sullivan:
Using Linked Data to create provenance-rich metadata interlinks: the design and evaluation of the NAISC-L interlinking framework for libraries, archives and museums. 921-947 - Jennifer O'Mahoney:
The role of born digital data in confronting a difficult and contested past through digital storytelling: the Waterford Memories Project. 949-958 - Mark Bell, Jenny Bunn:
Dark archives or a dark age for reasoning over archives? 959-966 - Treasa Harkin:
Creating a Linked Data thesaurus for Irish traditional music. 967-974 - Maria Ryan, Della Keating, Joanna Finegan:
Managing and accessing web archives: Irish practitioners' perspectives. 975-984 - Titia van der Werf, Bram van der Werf:
Will archivists use AI to enhance or to dumb down our societal memory? 985-988 - Tauriq Jenkins, Richard Ennals, June Bam-Hutchison:
Born free: a tale of two rivers. 989-990 - Angeliki Tzouganatou:
Openness and privacy in born-digital archives: reflecting the role of AI development. 991-999
- Ignacio Nieto Larrain, José-Carlos Mariátegui, David Maulén de los Reyes:
Back and forth: cybernetics interrelations and how it spread in Latin America. 1001-1012 - Andrés E. Burbano Valdes, Everardo Reyes:
Capsaicin and cybernetics: Mexican intellectual networks in the foundation of cybernetics. 1013-1025 - Cornelie Leopold:
On the relationships between philosophy of technology, cybernetics, and aesthetics with their impacts on Latin America. 1027-1044 - David Oswald:
Cybernetics, operations research and information theory at the Ulm School of Design and its influence on Latin America. 1045-1057 - Nathaniel Wolfson:
After the "new aesthetic": a short history of the cybernetic turn in Brazil. 1059-1069 - José-Carlos Mariátegui:
Cybernetics and systems art in Latin America: the art and communication center (CAyC) and its pioneering art and technology network. 1071-1084 - Priscila Almeida Cunha Arantes:
Waldemar Cordeiro and Arteônica: rewritings of digital art in Brazil and Latin America. 1085-1092 - Juan Alvarez, Claudio Gutierrez:
Cultural, scientific and technical antecedents of the Cybersyn project in Chile. 1093-1103 - Juan-Carlos Letelier:
Cybernetics in Chile: a history with unexpected chapters. 1105-1113 - David Maulén de los Reyes:
Vi/vi/sec/tion of industrial design. Gui Bonsiepe and the formulation of the interface concept. Intec Chile 1972. Document of the beginning of a paradigm shift in the interaction design disciplines. 1115-1129 - Sebastian Vehlken:
Operative communication: project Cybersyn and the intersection of information design, interface design, and interaction design. 1131-1152 - Carlos Senna Figueiredo:
Democracy and second-order cybernetics: the ascent of participation and creativity. 1153-1162 - Raúl Espejo:
Cybersyn, big data, variety engineering and governance. 1163-1177 - Claudio Araneda:
Jaime Garretón's cybernetic theory of the city and its system: a missing link in contemporary urban theory. 1179-1189 - David Maulén de los Reyes:
Bio-digital architecture. 1191-1206 - Ricardo Rodriguez-Ulloa:
Cybernetic governance of the Peruvian State: a proposal. 1207-1229 - Víctor Ganón:
URUCIB: a technological revolution in post-dictatorship Uruguay (1986-88). 1231-1254 - Raúl Espejo:
The Cybernetics of political communications and social transformation in Colombia: the case of the National Audit Office (1995-1998). 1255-1267 - Alfonso Reyes Alvarado:
The capabilities approach and variety engineering. A case for social cocreation of value. 1269-1277 - Leonardo Lavanderos:
From cybersin to cybernet. Considerations for a cybernetics design thinking in the socialism of the XXI century. 1279-1292 - David Maulén de los Reyes:
Why did cybernetics disappear from Latin America? 1293-1306 - Sergio Rodríguez Gómez:
Conjectural artworks: seeing at and beyond Maturana and Varela's visual thinking on life and cognition. 1307-1318
Volume 37, Number 4, December 2022
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Machine learning: can the automatic pilot transcend the toxic fog? 1319-1322 - Jadranka Svarc:
Prolegomena to social studies of digital innovation. 1323-1335 - Jakob Mökander, Ralph Schroeder:
AI and social theory. 1337-1351 - Carlos Montemayor, Jodi Halpern, Abrol Fairweather:
In principle obstacles for empathic AI: why we can't replace human empathy in healthcare. 1353-1359 - Milad Mirbabaie, Lennart Hofeditz, Nicholas R. J. Frick, Stefan Stieglitz:
Artificial intelligence in hospitals: providing a status quo of ethical considerations in academia to guide future research. 1361-1382 - Shengnan Han, Eugene Kelly, Shahrokh Nikou, Eric-Oluf Svee:
Aligning artificial intelligence with human values: reflections from a phenomenological perspective. 1383-1395 - Clément Henin, Daniel Le Métayer:
Beyond explainability: justifiability and contestability of algorithmic decision systems. 1397-1410 - Natasha Lushetich:
How many angels can dance on the head of a pin? Understanding 'alien' thought. 1411-1425 - Joris Krijger:
Enter the metrics: critical theory and organizational operationalization of AI ethics. 1427-1437 - Jennifer Chubb, Peter I. Cowling, Darren Reed:
Speeding up to keep up: exploring the use of AI in the research process. 1439-1457 - Felipe A. Tobar, Rodrigo González:
On machine learning and the replacement of human labour: anti-Cartesianism versus Babbage's path. 1459-1471 - Fernando Filgueiras:
New Pythias of public administration: ambiguity and choice in AI systems as challenges for governance. 1473-1486 - Arun Teja Polcumpally:
Artificial intelligence and global power structure: understanding through Luhmann's systems theory. 1487-1503 - Atle Ottesen Søvik:
What overarching ethical principle should a superintelligent AI follow? 1505-1518 - Ross Graham:
Discourse analysis of academic debate of ethics for AGI. 1519-1532 - Tsung-Hsing Ho:
Moral difference between humans and robots: paternalism and human-relative reason. 1533-1543 - Marion Ann Hersh:
Professional ethics and social responsibility: military work and peacebuilding. 1545-1561 - Osamu Sakura:
Robot and ukiyo-e: implications to cultural varieties in human-robot relationships. 1563-1573 - Jonny Holmström, Markus Hällgren:
AI management beyond the hype: exploring the co-constitution of AI and organizational context. 1575-1585 - Kate K. Mays, Yiming Lei, Rebecca Giovanetti, James E. Katz:
AI as a boss? A national US survey of predispositions governing comfort with expanded AI roles in society. 1587-1600 - Zichun Xu, Yang Zhao, Zhongwen Deng:
The possibilities and limits of AI in Chinese judicial judgment. 1601-1611 - Guy Paltieli:
The political imaginary of National AI Strategies. 1613-1624 - Lawrence Lengbeyer:
Dismantling the Chinese Room with linguistic tools: a framework for elucidating concept-application disputes. 1625-1643 - Neil Selwyn, Beatriz Gallo Cordoba:
Australian public understandings of artificial intelligence. 1645-1662 - Javier Camacho Ibáñez, Mónica Villas Olmeda:
Operationalising AI ethics: how are companies bridging the gap between practice and principles? An exploratory study. 1663-1687 - Tyler L. Jaynes:
"I Am Not Your Robot: " the metaphysical challenge of humanity's AIS ownership. 1689-1702 - Maria Nordström:
AI under great uncertainty: implications and decision strategies for public policy. 1703-1714 - Adam J. Andreotta, Nin Kirkham, Marco Rizzi:
AI, big data, and the future of consent. 1715-1728 - Vincent Qing Zhang:
Potentiality, intentionality, and embodiment: a genetic phenomenological sociology of Apple's technology. 1729-1737 - Malin Andtfolk, Linda Nyholm, Hilde Eide, Auvo Rauhala, Lisbeth Fagerström:
Attitudes toward the use of humanoid robots in healthcare - a cross-sectional study. 1739-1748 - Daria Onitiu:
Algorithmic abstractions of 'fashion identity' and the role of privacy with regard to algorithmic personalisation systems in the fashion domain. 1749-1758
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