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AI & Society, Volume 36
Volume 36, Number 1, March 2021
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Ethical encounters. 1-7 - Karl D. Stephan, Gyula Klima:
Artificial intelligence and its natural limits. 9-18 - Adam J. Andreotta:
The hard problem of AI rights. 19-32 - Simon Tremblay, Safae Essafi Tremblay, Pierre Poirier:
From filters to fillers: an active inference approach to body image distortion in the selfie era. 33-48 - Saikou Y. Diallo, F. LeRon Shults, Wesley J. Wildman:
Minding morality: ethical artificial societies for public policy modeling. 49-57 - Huw Roberts, Josh Cowls, Jessica Morley, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Vincent Wang, Luciano Floridi:
The Chinese approach to artificial intelligence: an analysis of policy, ethics, and regulation. 59-77 - Nik Hynek, Anzhelika Solovyeva:
Operations of power in autonomous weapon systems: ethical conditions and socio-political prospects. 79-99 - Kaira Sekiguchi, Koichi Hori:
Designing ethical artifacts has resulted in creative design. 101-148 - Edin Sabic, David Keeley, Bailey Henderson, Sara Nannemann:
Healthcare and anomaly detection: using machine learning to predict anomalies in heart rate data. 149-158 - Bokolo Anthony Jr.:
A case-based reasoning recommender system for sustainable smart city development. 159-183 - Luís Moniz Pereira:
The carousel of ethical machinery. 185-196 - Daniel Varona, Yadira Lizama-Mué, Juan-Luis Suárez:
Machine learning's limitations in avoiding automation of bias. 197-203 - Roger Andre Søraa, Pernille Søderholm Nyvoll, Karoline Blix Grønvik, J. Artur Serrano:
Children's perceptions of social robots: a study of the robots Pepper, AV1 and Tessa at Norwegian research fairs. 205-216 - Marieke M. M. Peeters, Jurriaan van Diggelen, Karel van den Bosch, Adelbert W. Bronkhorst, Mark A. Neerincx, Jan Maarten Schraagen, Stephan Raaijmakers:
Hybrid collective intelligence in a human-AI society. 217-238 - Monika Simmler, Ruth Frischknecht:
A taxonomy of human-machine collaboration: capturing automation and technical autonomy. 239-250 - Xueliang (Sean) Li, Marco C. Rozendaal, Kaspar Jansen, Catholijn M. Jonker, Eric Vermetten:
Things that help out: designing smart wearables as partners in stress management. 251-261 - Samuel T. Segun:
From machine ethics to computational ethics. 263-276 - Tahmina Khan Tithi, Tapas Chakraborty, Pinash Akter, Humayra Islam, Amina Khan Sabah:
Context, design and conveyance of information: ICT-enabled agricultural information services for rural women in Bangladesh. 277-287 - Raul Gonzalez Fabre, Javier Camacho Ibáñez, Pedro Tejedor Escobar:
Moral control and ownership in AI systems. 289-303 - Sergey B. Kulikov, Anastasiya V. Shirokova:
Artificial intelligence, culture and education. 305-318 - Martin Miernicki, Irene Ng (Huang Ying):
Artificial intelligence and moral rights. 319-329 - Daniel Schiff:
Out of the laboratory and into the classroom: the future of artificial intelligence in education. 331-348 - Inbar Kaminsky:
Do robots dream of escaping? Narrativity and ethics in Alex Garland's Ex-Machina and Luke Scott's Morgan. 349-359 - Tomás Zemcík:
Failure of chatbot Tay was evil, ugliness and uselessness in its nature or do we judge it through cognitive shortcuts and biases? 361-367 - Kwame Porter Robinson, Ron Eglash, Audrey Bennett, Sansitha Nandakumar, Lionel Robert:
Authente-Kente: enabling authentication for artisanal economies with deep learning. 369-379 - Sadia Sharmin, Danial Chakma:
Attention-based convolutional neural network for Bangla sentiment analysis. 381-396 - Stephen D. Edwards:
AI in the noosphere: an alignment of scientific and wisdom traditions. 397-399 - Attay Kremer:
Computers do not think, they are oriented in thought. 401-402
Volume 36, Number 2, June 2021
- John-Stewart Gordon:
AI and law: ethical, legal, and socio-political implications. 403-404 - Björn Lundgren:
Safety requirements vs. crashing ethically: what matters most for policies on autonomous vehicles. 405-415 - Greg Yanke:
Tying the knot with a robot: legal and philosophical foundations for human-artificial intelligence matrimony. 417-427 - Kestutis Mosakas:
On the moral status of social robots: considering the consciousness criterion. 429-443 - Migle Laukyte:
The intelligent machine: a new metaphor through which to understand both corporations and AI. 445-456 - John-Stewart Gordon:
Artificial moral and legal personhood. 457-471 - David J. Gunkel, Jordan Joseph Wales:
Debate: what is personhood in the age of AI? 473-486 - Carissa Véliz:
Moral zombies: why algorithms are not moral agents. 487-497 - Joshua Jowitt:
Assessing contemporary legislative proposals for their compatibility with a natural law case for AI legal personhood. 499-508 - Kristina Astromske, Eimantas Peicius, Paulius Astromskis:
Ethical and legal challenges of informed consent applying artificial intelligence in medical diagnostic consultations. 509-520 - Simon M. Taylor, Marc De Leeuw:
Guidance systems: from autonomous directives to legal sensor-bilities. 521-534 - Helen Smith:
Clinical AI: opacity, accountability, responsibility and liability. 535-545 - Julija Kirsiene, Edita Gruodyte, Darius Amilevicius:
From computerised thing to digital being: mission (Im)possible? 547-560 - Tanel Kerikmäe, Evelin Pärn-Lee:
Legal dilemmas of Estonian artificial intelligence strategy: in between of e-society and global race. 561-572 - Milda Zaliauskaite:
Role of ruler or intruder? Patient's right to autonomy in the age of innovation and technologies. 573-583 - Joel Walmsley:
Artificial intelligence and the value of transparency. 585-595 - Epifanio Torres, Will Penman:
An emerging AI mainstream: deepening our comparisons of AI frameworks through rhetorical analysis. 597-608 - Johan Rochel, Florian Evéquoz:
Getting into the engine room: a blueprint to investigate the shadowy steps of AI ethics. 609-622 - Jozef Andrasko, Matús Mesarcík, Ondrej Hamulák:
The regulatory intersections between artificial intelligence, data protection and cyber security: challenges and opportunities for the EU legal framework. 623-636 - Helen Ryland:
Could you hate a robot? And does it matter if you could? 637-649 - Kestutis Mosakas:
Review of Robot Rights by David J. Gunkel. 651-654 - John-Stewart Gordon:
Review of Artificial Intelligence: Reflections in Philosophy, Theology and the Social Sciences by Benedikt P. Göcke and Astrid Rosenthal-von der Pütten. 655-659 - Johann-Christian Põder:
AI ethics - a review of three recent publications. 661-664 - Kestutis Mosakas:
Smart technologies and fundamental rights: Brill's interview with John-Stewart Gordon. 665-668
Volume 36, Number 3, September 2021
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Ethical dilemmas. 669-676 - Irving Massey:
A new Turing test: metaphor vs. nonsense. 677-684 - Robert Sparrow:
Why machines cannot be moral. 685-693 - Manuel Carabantes:
The Internet as a Heideggerian paradigm of modern technology: an argument against mythinformation. 695-703 - Maximilian Kiener:
Artificial intelligence in medicine and the disclosure of risks. 705-713 - Jaana Parviainen, Mark Coeckelbergh:
The political choreography of the Sophia robot: beyond robot rights and citizenship to political performances for the social robotics market. 715-724 - Sebastian Gajek, Michael Lees, Christoph Jansen:
IIoT and cyber-resilience. 725-735 - Maayan Zhitomirsky-Geffet, Avraham Weic:
Utilizing Facebook for professional integration of three ethnic groups in Israel. 737-755 - Frédérick Bruneault, Andréane Sabourin Laflamme:
AI Ethics: how can information ethics provide a framework to avoid usual conceptual pitfalls? An Overview. 757-766 - Thilo Hagendorff:
Forbidden knowledge in machine learning reflections on the limits of research and publication. 767-781 - Petar Radanliev, David De Roure, Max Van Kleek, Omar Santos, Uchenna Ani:
Artificial intelligence in cyber physical systems. 783-796 - Moa De Lucia Dahlbeck:
AI and Spinoza: a review of law's conceptual treatment of Lethal Autonomous. 797-805 - Karim Jebari, Joakim Lundborg:
Artificial superintelligence and its limits: why AlphaZero cannot become a general agent. 807-815 - Prasanna Illankoon, Phillip Tretten:
Collaborating AI and human experts in the maintenance domain. 817-828 - Dragos-Cristian Vasilescu, Michael Filzmoser:
Machine invention systems: a (r)evolution of the invention process? 829-837 - Paul Formosa, Malcolm R. K. Ryan:
Making moral machines: why we need artificial moral agents. 839-851 - Anuradha Venugopal Reddy, Iohanna Nicenboim, James Pierce, Elisa Giaccardi:
Encountering ethics through design: a workshop with nonhuman participants. 853-861 - William Hebblewhite, Alexander James Gillett:
Every step you take, we'll be watching you: nudging and the ramifications of GPS technology. 863-875 - Rubens Lacerda Queiroz, Fábio Ferrentini Sampaio, Cabral Lima, Priscila Machado Vieira Lima:
AI from Concrete to Abstract. 877-893 - Elissa Farrow:
Mindset matters: how mindset affects the ability of staff to anticipate and adapt to Artificial Intelligence (AI) future scenarios in organisational settings. 895-909 - Tyler L. Jaynes:
Citizenship as the exception to the rule: an addendum. 911-930 - Mattia Vicari, Mauro Gaspari:
Analysis of news sentiments using natural language processing and deep learning. 931-937 - Louise Bezuidenhout, Emanuele Ratti:
What does it mean to embed ethics in data science? An integrative approach based on microethics and virtues. 939-953 - Vinícius P. Gonçalves, Geraldo P. R. Filho, Leandro Y. Mano, Rodrigo Bonacin:
FlexPersonas: flexible design of IoT-based home healthcare systems targeted at the older adults. 955-973 - Daniel Innerarity:
Making the black box society transparent. 975-981 - Alice Parfett, Stuart Townley, Kristofer Allerfeldt:
AI-based healthcare: a new dawn or apartheid revisited? 983-999 - Lode Lauwaert:
Artificial intelligence and responsibility. 1001-1009 - Bahadur Ibrahimov:
Intelligent inspection robotics: an open innovation project. 1011-1020 - John McClellan Marshall:
Technoevidence: the "Turing limit" 2020. 1021-1028 - Karuna Yepuganti, Sonalika Awasthi, Raghav Sharma:
IoT plant monitoring system for mental health therapy. 1029-1034 - Ashkan Farhadi:
There is no "I" in "AI". 1035-1046 - Mike Zajko:
Conservative AI and social inequality: conceptualizing alternatives to bias through social theory. 1047-1056 - Vahid Taebnia, Mostafa Taqavi:
The enhanced human vs. the virtuous human: a post-phenomenological perspective. 1057-1068 - Sue Pearson:
The inside out mirror. 1069-1070 - Karl Kristian Larsson:
The wiseman in the mirror. 1071-1072 - Kimberly Cass:
The Klein bottle of digital identity. 1073-1074 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Hidalgo, C.A (2021). How Humans Judge Machines. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. ISBN: 9780262045520. 1075 - Daryl Li:
Pasquale, Frank. New Laws of Robotics: Defending Human Expertise in the Age of AI. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2020. 1077-1078 - Pavan Duggal:
#Cyberlaw: global trends in 2014. 1079-1081 - Joachim Vogt:
Where is the human got to go? Artificial intelligence, machine learning, big data, digitalisation, and human-robot interaction in Industry 4.0 and 5.0. 1083-1087
Volume 36, Number 4, December 2021
- David Smith:
Perhaps Ned Ludd had a point? 1089-1091 - Mitra Azar, Geoff Cox, Leonardo Impett:
Introduction: ways of machine seeing. 1093-1104 - Nicolas Malevé:
On the data set's ruins. 1117-1131 - Fabian Offert, Peter Bell:
Perceptual bias and technical metapictures: critical machine vision as a humanities challenge. 1133-1144 - Lev Manovich:
Computer vision, human senses, and language of art. 1145-1152 - Daniel Chávez Heras, Tobias Blanke:
On machine vision and photographic imagination. 1153-1165 - Carloalberto Treccani:
The brain, the artificial neural network and the snake: why we see what we see. 1167-1175 - Claudio Celis Bueno, María Jesús Schultz Abarca:
Memo Akten's Learning to See: from machine vision to the machinic unconscious. 1177-1187 - Manuel van der Veen:
Crossroads of seeing: about layers in painting and superimposition in Augmented Reality. 1189-1200 - Gabriel Pereira, Bruno Moreschi:
Artificial intelligence and institutional critique 2.0: unexpected ways of seeing with computer vision. 1201-1223 - Iain Emsley:
Causality, poetics, and grammatology: the role of computation in machine seeing. 1225-1231 - Rebecca Uliasz:
Seeing like an algorithm: operative images and emergent subjects. 1233-1241 - Perle Møhl:
Seeing threats, sensing flesh: human-machine ensembles at work. 1243-1252 - Abelardo Gil-Fournier, Jussi Parikka:
Ground truth to fake geographies: machine vision and learning in visual practices. 1253-1262 - Matteo Pasquinelli, Vladan Joler:
The Nooscope manifested: AI as instrument of knowledge extractivism. 1263-1280 - Luciana Parisi:
Negative optics in vision machines. 1281-1293 - Nicholas Mirzoeff:
Artificial vision, white space and racial surveillance capitalism. 1295-1305 - Benjamin H. Bratton:
AI urbanism: a design framework for governance, program, and platform cognition. 1307-1312 - Alexander N. Melkozernov, Vibeke Sørensen:
What drives bio-art in the twenty-first century? Sources of innovations and cultural implications in bio-art/biodesign and biotechnology. 1313-1321 - Vladimir Todorovic:
Reimagining life (forms) with generative and bio art. 1323-1329 - Carole Collet:
Designing our future bio-materiality. 1331-1342 - Margarita Benitez, Markus Vogl:
Digitally fabricated aesthetic enhancements and enrichments. 1343-1348 - May O. Lwin, Janelle Shaina Ng, Karthikayen Jayasundar, Astrid Kensinger, Sheryl W. Tan:
Visual design for a mobile pandemic map system for public health. 1349-1360 - Galina Mihaleva:
Bio matter in creative practises for fashion and design. 1361-1365 - Eduardo Kac:
Bio art. 1367-1376 - Meridel Rubenstein, Peer Sathikh:
Eden in Iraq: a wastewater design project as bio-art - a confluence of nature and culture, design and ecology, in Southern Iraq marshes. 1377-1388 - Suzanne Anker:
Epistemic practices in Bio Art. 1389-1394 - Suzanne Anker:
Correction to: Epistemic practices in Bio Art. 1395-1396 - Suzanne Anker:
Correction to: Epistemic practices in Bio Art. 1397 - Kate Crawford, Trevor Paglen:
Correction to: Excavating AI: the politics of images in machine learning training sets. 1399
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