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AI & Society, Volume 38
Volume 38, Number 1, February 2023
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Moving the AI needle: from chaos to engagement. 1-4 - Salvatore Sapienza, Anton Vedder:
Principle-based recommendations for big data and machine learning in food safety: the P-SAFETY model. 5-20 - Gagan Deep Kaur:
Processing of grid-based design representations: a qualitative analysis of concurrent think-aloud protocols. 21-33 - Thilo Hagendorff, Kristof Meding:
Ethical considerations and statistical analysis of industry involvement in machine learning research. 35-45 - Alejo José G. Sison, Dulce M. Redín:
A neo-aristotelian perspective on the need for artificial moral agents (AMAs). 47-65 - Timothy Childers, Juraj Hvorecký, Ondrej Majer:
Empiricism in the foundations of cognition. 67-87 - Nello Cristianini, Teresa Scantamburlo, James Ladyman:
The social turn of artificial intelligence. 89-96 - Peter Mantello, Manh-Tung Ho, Minh Hoang Nguyen, Quan-Hoang Vuong:
Bosses without a heart: socio-demographic and cross-cultural determinants of attitude toward Emotional AI in the workplace. 97-119 - Takeshi Ebina, Keita Kinjo:
Paradox of choice and sharing personal information. 121-132 - Eduard Fosch-Villaronga, Simone van der Hof, Christoph Lutz, Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux:
Toy story or children story? Putting children and their rights at the forefront of the artificial intelligence revolution. 133-152 - Jakob Mökander, Maria Axente:
Ethics-based auditing of automated decision-making systems: intervention points and policy implications. 153-171 - Mario Andrés Chalita, Alexander Sedzielarz:
Beyond the frame problem: what (else) can Heidegger do for AI? 173-184 - Rajakishore Nath, Riya Manna:
From posthumanism to ethics of artificial intelligence. 185-196 - Andrew Dana Hudson, Ed Finn, Ruth Wylie:
What can science fiction tell us about the future of artificial intelligence policy? 197-211 - Joshua Siegel, Georgios Pappas:
Morals, ethics, and the technology capabilities and limitations of automated and self-driving vehicles. 213-226 - Sabrina Hauser, Johan Redström, Heather Wiltse:
The widening rift between aesthetics and ethics in the design of computational things. 227-243 - Irene Nandutu, Marcellin Atemkeng, Patrice Okouma:
Integrating AI ethics in wildlife conservation AI systems in South Africa: a review, challenges, and future research agenda. 245-257 - Nancy S. Jecker:
Can we wrong a robot? 259-268 - Vladimir Tsyganov:
Socio-political stability, voter's emotional expectations, and information management. 269-281 - Josh Cowls, Andreas Tsamados, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:
The AI gambit: leveraging artificial intelligence to combat climate change - opportunities, challenges, and recommendations. 283-307 - Aníbal Monasterio Astobiza, David Rodriguez Arias-Vailhen, Txetxu Ausín, Mario Toboso, Manuel Aparicio, Daniel López:
Attitudes about Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) technology among Spanish rehabilitation professionals. 309-318 - Isabella Hermann:
Artificial intelligence in fiction: between narratives and metaphors. 319-329 - Jennings Byrd, Paige Paquette:
Frankenstein: a creation of artificial intelligence? 331-342 - Andy E. Williams:
Are wicked problems a lack of general collective intelligence? 343-348 - Mads Larsen:
Toward a dataist future: tracing Scandinavian posthumanism in Real Humans. 349-361 - Jakob Svensson:
Artificial intelligence is an oxymoron. 363-372 - Yishu Mao, Kristin Shi-Kupfer:
Online public discourse on artificial intelligence and ethics in China: context, content, and implications. 373-389 - Daniel J. Gervais:
Towards an effective transnational regulation of AI. 391-410 - Jessica Morley, Libby Kinsey, Anat Elhalal, Francesca Garcia, Marta Ziosi, Luciano Floridi:
Operationalising AI ethics: barriers, enablers and next steps. 411-423 - Yew-Kwang Ng:
Could artificial intelligence have consciousness? Some perspectives from neurology and parapsychology. 425-436
Volume 38, Number 2, April 2023
- Satinder P. Gill:
Editorial: Beyond regulatory ethics. 437-438 - Angelo Trotta, Marta Ziosi, Vincenzo Lomonaco:
The future of ethics in AI: challenges and opportunities. 439-441 - Laura Sartori, Giulia Bocca:
Minding the gap(s): public perceptions of AI and socio-technical imaginaries. 443-458 - Francesca Lagioia, Riccardo Rovatti, Giovanni Sartor:
Algorithmic fairness through group parities? The case of COMPAS-SAPMOC. 459-478 - Francesca Foffano, Teresa Scantamburlo, Atia Cortés:
Investing in AI for social good: an analysis of European national strategies. 479-500 - Steve J. Bickley, Benno Torgler:
Cognitive architectures for artificial intelligence ethics. 501-519 - Francesco Corea, Fabio Fossa, Andrea Loreggia, Stefano Quintarelli, Salvatore Sapienza:
A principle-based approach to AI: the case for European Union and Italy. 521-535 - Rosanna Fanni, Valerie Eveline Steinkogler, Giulia Zampedri, Jo Pierson:
Enhancing human agency through redress in Artificial Intelligence Systems. 537-547 - Benedetta Giovanola, Simona Tiribelli:
Beyond bias and discrimination: redefining the AI ethics principle of fairness in healthcare machine-learning algorithms. 549-563 - Jorão Gomes Jr., Heder Soares Bernardino, Jairo Francisco de Souza, Enayat Rajabi:
Indexing, enriching, and understanding Brazilian missing person cases from data of distributed repositories on the web. 565-579 - Julián Goñi, Claudio Fuentes, María P. Raveau:
An experiential account of a large-scale interdisciplinary data analysis of public engagement. 581-593 - Pradeep Paraman, Sanmugam Anamalah:
Ethical artificial intelligence framework for a good AI society: principles, opportunities and perils. 595-611 - David Steingard, Marcello Balduccini, Akanksha Sinha:
Applying AI for social good: Aligning academic journal ratings with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). 613-629 - Marc M. Anderson, Karën Fort:
From the ground up: developing a practical ethical methodology for integrating AI into industry. 631-645 - Artur Modlinski:
The psychological and ethological antecedents of human consent to techno-empowerment of autonomous office assistants. 647-663 - Justyna Stypinska:
AI ageism: a critical roadmap for studying age discrimination and exclusion in digitalized societies. 665-677 - Seth D. Baum, Andrea Owe:
From AI for people to AI for the world and the universe. 679-680 - Inga Ulnicane:
Against the new space race: global AI competition and cooperation for people. 681-683 - Andrés Morales-Forero, Samuel Bassetto, Eric Coatanéa:
Toward safe AI. 685-696 - Amar Singh, Shipra Tholia:
Artificial Intelligence/Consciousness: being and becoming John Malkovich. 697-706 - Muhammad Anshari, Mahani Hamdan, Norainie Ahmad, Emil Ali, Hamizah Haidi:
COVID-19, artificial intelligence, ethical challenges and policy implications. 707-720 - Barbara Catania, Giovanna Guerrini, Chiara Accinelli:
Fairness & friends in the data science era. 721-731 - Hyesun Choung, Prabu David, Arun Ross:
Trust and ethics in AI. 733-745 - Ludovica Marinucci, Claudia Mazzuca, Aldo Gangemi:
Exposing implicit biases and stereotypes in human and artificial intelligence: state of the art and challenges with a focus on gender. 747-761 - Carlos Andres Salazar Martinez, Olga Lucía Quintero Montoya:
The ethics of algorithms from the perspective of the cultural history of consciousness: first look. 763-775 - Mark L. Ornelas, Gary Smith, Masoumeh Mansouri:
Redefining culture in cultural robotics. 777-788 - Katarzyna Pfeifer-Chomiczewska:
Intelligent service robots for elderly or disabled people and human dignity: legal point of view. 789-800 - Rajitha Ramanayake, Philipp Wicke, Vivek Nallur:
Immune moral models? Pro-social rule breaking as a moral enhancement approach for ethical AI. 801-813 - Theresa Züger, Hadi Asghari:
AI for the public. How public interest theory shifts the discourse on AI. 815-828 - Antonio Carnevale, Emanuela Tangari, Andrea Iannone, Elena Sartini:
Will Big Data and personalized medicine do the gender dimension justice? 829-841 - Mehdi Dastani, Vahid Yazdanpanah:
Responsibility of AI Systems. 843-852 - A. K. Ajeesh, S. Rukmini:
Posthuman perception of artificial intelligence in science fiction: an exploration of Kazuo Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun. 853-860 - Brian Ball, Alexandros Koliousis:
Training philosopher engineers for better AI. 861-868 - Garrick Cabour, Andrés Morales-Forero, Élise Ledoux, Samuel Bassetto:
An explanation space to align user studies with the technical development of Explainable AI. 869-887 - Caterina Berbenni-Rehm:
Evidence-based AI, ethics and the circular economy of knowledge. 889-895 - Rahul Kumar Dass, Nick Petersen, Marisa Omori, Tamara Rice Lave, Ubbo Visser:
Detecting racial inequalities in criminal justice: towards an equitable deep learning approach for generating and interpreting racial categories using mugshots. 897-918 - Andreas Cebulla, Zygmunt L. Szpak, Catherine Howell, Genevieve Knight, Mohammed Sazzad Hussain:
Applying ethics to AI in the workplace: the design of a scorecard for Australian workplace health and safety. 919-935 - Robin Kopecky, Michaela Jirout Kosová, Daniel D. Novotný, Jaroslav Flegr, David Cerný:
How virtue signalling makes us better: moral preferences with respect to autonomous vehicle type choices. 937-946 - Guglielmo Papagni, Jesse de Pagter, Setareh Zafari, Michael Filzmoser, Sabine T. Köszegi:
Artificial agents' explainability to support trust: considerations on timing and context. 947-960 - Erik Hermann:
Psychological targeting: nudge or boost to foster mindful and sustainable consumption? 961-962 - Lavindra de Silva, Alan Mycroft:
Toward trustworthy programming for autonomous concurrent systems. 963-965 - Emma Engstrom, Karim Jebari:
AI4People or People4AI? On human adaptation to AI at work. 967-968 - Masoumeh Mansouri:
A call for epistemic analysis of cultural theories for AI methods. 969-971 - Vivek Nallur, Graham Finlay:
Empathetic AI for ethics-in-the-small. 973-974 - Davor Petreski, Ibrahim C. Hashim:
Word embeddings are biased. But whose bias are they reflecting? 975-982 - Mohsin Murtaza, Chi-Tsun Cheng, Mohammad Fard, John Zeleznikow:
The importance of transparency in naming conventions, designs, and operations of safety features: from modern ADAS to fully autonomous driving functions. 983-993 - Matteo Fabbri:
Social influence for societal interest: a pro-ethical framework for improving human decision making through multi-stakeholder recommender systems. 995-1002 - Luciana Monteiro Krebs, Bieke Zaman, David Geerts, Sonia Elisa Caregnato:
Every word you say: algorithmic mediation and implications of data-driven scholarly communication. 1003-1012 - Marcel Naudé, Kolawole John Adebayo, Rohan Nanda:
A machine learning approach to detecting fraudulent job types. 1013-1024 - Richard Frissen, Kolawole John Adebayo, Rohan Nanda:
A machine learning approach to recognize bias and discrimination in job advertisements. 1025-1038
Volume 38, Number 3, June 2023
- Aale Luusua, Johanna Ylipulli, Marcus Foth, Alessandro Aurigi:
Urban AI: understanding the emerging role of artificial intelligence in smart cities. 1039-1044 - Michael Batty:
The emergence and evolution of urban AI. 1045-1048 - Kars Alfrink, Ianus Keller, Neelke Doorn, Gerd Kortuem:
Tensions in transparent urban AI: designing a smart electric vehicle charge point. 1049-1065 - Lena Podoletz:
We have to talk about emotional AI and crime. 1067-1082 - Nitin Sawhney:
Contestations in urban mobility: rights, risks, and responsibilities for Urban AI. 1083-1098 - Yu-Shan Tseng:
Assemblage thinking as a methodology for studying urban AI phenomena. 1099-1110 - Fabio Iapaolo:
The system of autono‑mobility: computer vision and urban complexity - reflections on artificial intelligence at urban scale. 1111-1122 - Anu Lehtiö, Maria Hartikainen, Saara Ala-Luopa, Thomas Olsson, Kaisa Väänänen:
Understanding citizen perceptions of AI in the smart city. 1123-1134 - Tan Yigitcanlar, Duzgun Agdas, Kenan Degirmenci:
Artificial intelligence in local governments: perceptions of city managers on prospects, constraints and choices. 1135-1150 - Giulio Mecacci, Simeon C. Calvert, Filippo Santoni de Sio:
Human-machine coordination in mixed traffic as a problem of Meaningful Human Control. 1151-1166 - Jouko Makkonen, Rita Latikka, Laura Kaukonen, Markus Laine, Kaisa Väänänen:
Advancing residents' use of shared spaces in Nordic superblocks with intelligent technologies. 1167-1184 - Pooyan Doozandeh, Limeng Cui, Rui Yu:
Street surface condition of wealthy and poor neighborhoods: the case of Los Angeles. 1185-1192 - Anthony Vanky, Ri Le:
Urban-semantic computer vision: a framework for contextual understanding of people in urban spaces. 1193-1207 - Stephanie Sherman:
The Polyopticon: a diagram for urban artificial intelligences. 1209-1222 - Alexander Gaio, Federico Cugurullo:
Cyclists and autonomous vehicles at odds. 1223-1237 - Toby Walsh:
Will AI end privacy? How do we avoid an Orwellian future. 1239-1240 - Minna Ruckenstein:
Time to re-humanize algorithmic systems. 1241-1242 - Jean Burgess:
Everyday data cultures: beyond Big Critique and the technological sublime. 1243-1244 - Alessandro Aurigi:
Urban AI depends: the need for (wider) urban strategies. 1245-1247 - Fabio Duarte, Barbro Fröding:
Watch out! Cities as data engines. 1249-1250 - Hira Sheikh:
All knowledge is not smart: racial and environmental injustices within legacies of smart cities. 1251-1252 - Johanna Ylipulli:
Federico Cugurullo (2021): Frankenstein Urbanism: Eco, Smart and Autonomous Cities, Artificial Intelligence and the End of the City. 1253-1255 - Aale Luusua:
Katherine Crawford: Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence. 1257-1259
Volume 38, Number 4, August 2023
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Seeing beyond the lens of Platonic Embodiment. 1261-1266 - Michael Pflanzer, Veljko Dubljevic, William A. Bauer, Darby Orcutt, George F. List, Munindar P. Singh:
Embedding AI in society: ethics, policy, governance, and impacts. 1267-1271 - Justin Grandinetti:
Examining embedded apparatuses of AI in Facebook and TikTok. 1273-1286 - Stephen C. Slota, Kenneth R. Fleischmann, Sherri R. Greenberg, Nitin Verma, Brenna Cummings, Lan Li, Chris Shenefiel:
Many hands make many fingers to point: challenges in creating accountable AI. 1287-1299 - Jakob Stenseke:
Artificial virtuous agents: from theory to machine implementation. 1301-1320 - Gloria Andrada, Robert W. Clowes, Paul R. Smart:
Varieties of transparency: exploring agency within AI systems. 1321-1331 - Johannes Himmelreich:
Against "Democratizing AI". 1333-1346 - Claudio Novelli:
Legal personhood for the integration of AI systems in the social context: a study hypothesis. 1347-1359 - Frederico Freitas, Todd Berreth, Yi-Chun Chen, Arnav Jhala:
Characterizing the perception of urban spaces from visual analytics of street-level imagery. 1361-1371 - Amanul Haque, Nirav Ajmeri, Munindar P. Singh:
Understanding dynamics of polarization via multiagent social simulation. 1373-1389 - Jernej Kaluza:
Far-reaching effects of the filter bubble, the most notorious metaphor in media studies. 1391-1393 - Paul Fyfe:
How to cheat on your final paper: Assigning AI for student writing. 1395-1405 - Hendrik Kempt, Jan-Christoph Heilinger, Saskia K. Nagel:
"I'm afraid I can't let you do that, Doctor": meaningful disagreements with AI in medical contexts. 1407-1414 - Ryan Jenkins, Kristian J. Hammond, Sarah Spurlock, Leilani Gilpin:
Separating facts and evaluation: motivation, account, and learnings from a novel approach to evaluating the human impacts of machine learning. 1415-1428 - Yousif Hassan:
Governing algorithms from the South: a case study of AI development in Africa. 1429-1442 - Piercosma Bisconti, Davide Orsitto, Federica Fedorczyk, Fabio Brau, Marianna Capasso, Lorenzo De Marinis, Hüseyin Eken, Federica Merenda, Mirko Forti, Marco Pacini, Claudia Schettini:
Maximizing team synergy in AI-related interdisciplinary groups: an interdisciplinary-by-design iterative methodology. 1443-1452 - Vahid Yazdanpanah, Enrico H. Gerding, Sebastian Stein, Mehdi Dastani, Catholijn M. Jonker, Timothy J. Norman, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn:
Reasoning about responsibility in autonomous systems: challenges and opportunities. 1453-1464 - Simone Borsci, Ville V. Lehtola, Francesco Nex, Michael Ying Yang, Ellen-Wien Augustijn, Leila Bagheriye, Christoph Brune, Ourania Kounadi, Jamy Li, João L. R. Moreira, Joanne Van Der Nagel, Bernard P. Veldkamp, Duc Viet Le, Mingshu Wang, Fons Wijnhoven, Jelmer M. Wolterink, Raúl Zurita-Milla:
Embedding artificial intelligence in society: looking beyond the EU AI master plan using the culture cycle. 1465-1484 - Femi Richard Omotoyinbo:
Smart soldiers: towards a more ethical warfare. 1485-1491 - Jonne Maas:
Machine learning and power relations. 1493-1500 - Nick Munn, Dan Weijers:
Corporate responsibility for the termination of digital friends. 1501-1502 - Keith Begley:
Beta-testing the ethics plugin. 1503-1505
- Jean-Christophe Bélisle-Pipon, Erica Monteferrante, Marie-Christine Roy, Vincent Couture:
Artificial intelligence ethics has a black box problem. 1507-1522 - Thomas Herrmann, Sabine Pfeiffer:
Keeping the organization in the loop: a socio-technical extension of human-centered artificial intelligence. 1523-1542 - Robert Epstein, Maria Bordyug, Ya-Han Chen, Yijing Chen, Anna Ginther, Gina Kirkish, Holly Stead:
Toward the search for the perfect blade runner: a large-scale, international assessment of a test that screens for "humanness sensitivity". 1543-1563 - Nuno David:
Implementations, interpretative malleability, value-laden-ness and the moral significance of agent-based social simulations. 1565-1577 - Milos Agatonovic:
The fiction of simulation: a critique of Bostrom's simulation argument. 1579-1586 - Sonia Jawaid Shaikh, Ignacio Cruz:
AI in human teams: effects on technology use, members' interactions, and creative performance under time scarcity. 1587-1600 - Angela Abreu Rosa de Sá, Diego Moreira de Araujo Carvalho, Eduardo L. M. Naves:
Reflections on epistemological aspects of artificial intelligence during the COVID-19 pandemic. 1601-1608 - Tilman Hartwig, Yuko Ikkatai, Naohiro Takanashi, Hiromi M. Yokoyama:
Artificial intelligence ELSI score for science and technology: a comparison between Japan and the US. 1609-1626 - Lee Valentine, Simon D'Alfonso, Reeva Lederman:
Recommender systems for mental health apps: advantages and ethical challenges. 1627-1638 - James Smith, Tanya de Villiers-Botha:
Hey, Google, leave those kids alone: Against hypernudging children in the age of big data. 1639-1649 - James Brusseau:
From the ground truth up: doing AI ethics from practice to principles. 1651-1657 - Johanna Johansen, Tore Pedersen, Christian Johansen:
Studying human-to-computer bias transference. 1659-1683 - Núria Vallès-Peris, Miquel Domènech:
Caring in the in-between: a proposal to introduce responsible AI and robotics to healthcare. 1685-1695 - Christian Hugo Hoffmann:
A philosophical view on singularity and strong AI. 1697-1714 - Kostas Terzidis, Filippo Fabrocini, Hyejin Lee:
Unintentional intentionality: art and design in the age of artificial intelligence. 1715-1724 - Luca M. Possati:
Psychoanalyzing artificial intelligence: the case of Replika. 1725-1738 - Outi Tuisku, Satu Pekkarinen, Lea Hennala, Helinä Melkas:
Decision-makers' attitudes toward the use of care robots in welfare services. 1739-1752 - Steffen Krüger, Christopher Wilson:
The problem with trust: on the discursive commodification of trust in AI. 1753-1761 - Min-Sun Kim:
Meta-narratives on machinic otherness: beyond anthropocentrism and exoticism. 1763-1770 - Quoc Nguyen Phan, Chin-Chin Tseng, Le Thi Thu Hoa, Thi Bich Ngoc Nguyen:
The application of chatbot on Vietnamese misgrant workers' right protection in the implementation of new generation free trade agreements (FTAS). 1771-1783 - Jussi Salmi:
A democratic way of controlling artificial general intelligence. 1785-1791 - Minatsu Sugimoto, Hiroo Iwata, Hiroya Igarashi:
Ankle-Worn Sensor Sleeve to increase walking motivation. 1793-1803
Volume 38, Number 5, October 2023
- Satinder P. Gill:
Why thinking about the tacit is key for shaping our AI futures. 1805-1808 - Satinder P. Gill:
AI & society, knowledge, culture and communication. 1809-1811 - Mihai Nadin:
Intelligence at any price? A criterion for defining AI. 1813-1817 - Mihály Héder:
The epistemic opacity of autonomous systems and the ethical consequences. 1819-1827 - Bo Göranzon:
On dialogue and certainty. 1829-1836 - Melvin Chen, Lock Yue Chew:
Causal Reasoning and Meno's Paradox. 1837-1845 - Walter B. Gulick:
Machine and person: reconstructing Harry Collins's categories. 1847-1858 - Stamatia Portanova:
In and out of Wonderland: a criti/chromatic stroll across postdigital culture. 1859-1870 - Rebekah Wilson:
Aesthetic and technical strategies for networked music performance. 1871-1884 - Jonathan Impett:
Music, discourse and intuitive technology. 1885-1896 - Ghislaine Boddington:
The Internet of Bodies - alive, connected and collective: the virtual physical future of our bodies and our senses. 1897-1913 - Sha Xin Wei:
Writing in water: dense responsive media in place of relational interfaces. 1915-1923 - Anders Sandblad:
On professional skill in the age of digital technology. 1925-1933 - Massimo Negrotti:
On the 'nature' of the 'artificial'. 1935-1940 - Marleen Wynants:
SWAMPLAB. 1941-1944 - Francesco Garibaldo, Emilio Rebecchi:
If I cannot move heaven, I will raise hell. 1945-1948 - Zsolt Ziegler:
Michael Polányi's fiduciary program against fake news and deepfake in the digital age. 1949-1957 - Ignacio Nieto Larrain, Marcelo Velasco, Christian Miranda:
Tacit engagement using tablet-mediated learning for social good. 1959-1963 - Robert Rosenberger:
Against spectatorial utopianism. 1965-1966 - Tim Rein:
The dissolution of the condicio humana. 1967-1968 - Irving Massey:
Testing Turing. 1969-1970 - Carl Macrae:
From Blade Runners to Tin Kickers: what the governance of artificial intelligence safety needs to learn from air crash investigators. 1971-1973 - Erik Hermann:
Artificial intelligence in marketing: friend or foe of sustainable consumption? 1975-1976 - Matthew Studley, Scott DeLahunta:
Roots and models. 1977-1979
- Clare Foster, Ruichen Zhang:
Special Issue: Iteration and persuasion as key conditions of digital societies. 1981-1986 - Ella McPherson:
Witnessing: iteration and social change. 1987-1995 - Ana Belén Martínez García:
Women activists' strategies of online self-presentation. 1997-2008 - Clare L. E. Foster:
Truth as social practice in a digital era: iteration as persuasion. 2009-2023 - Anthony Kelly:
Recontextualising partisan outrage online: analysing the public negotiation of Trump support among American conservatives in 2016. 2025-2036 - Cathrine Hasse:
Material hermeneutics as cultural learning: from relations to processes of relations. 2037-2044 - Filippo Pianca, Vieri Giuliano Santucci:
Interdependence as the key for an ethical artificial autonomy. 2045-2059 - Guobin Yang:
Online lockdown diaries as endurance art. 2061-2070 - Tomasz Hollanek:
AI transparency: a matter of reconciling design with critique. 2071-2079 - Madeline Smith-Johnson:
Labor for community on Facebook. 2081-2092 - Ruichen Zhang:
Re-directing socialist persuasion through affective reiteration: a discourse analysis of 'Socialist Memes' on the Chinese internet. 2093-2104 - Orysia Hrudka:
'Pretending to favour the public': how Facebook's declared democratising ideals are reversed by its practices. 2105-2115 - Alan F. Blackwell:
Wonders without number: the information economy of data and its subjects. 2117-2118
Volume 38, Number 6, December 2023
- Jeffrey White, Dietrich Brandt, Jan Söffner, Larry Stapleton:
Artificial thinking and doomsday projections: a discourse on trust, ethics and safety. 2119-2124
- Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Hermeneutic of performing cultures. 2125-2132 - Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Transforming hermeneutics. 2133-2139 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis:
Enactive hermeneutics and smart medical technologies. 2141-2149 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Machine hermeneutics, postphenomenology, and facial recognition technology. 2151-2158 - Galit Wellner:
Material hermeneutic of digital technologies in the age of AI. 2159-2166 - Dimitri Ginev:
A hermeneutics of scientific practices and the concept of "text". 2167-2176 - Babette Babich:
Material hermeneutics and Heelan's philosophy of technoscience. 2177-2188 - Tailer G. Ransom, Shaun Gallagher:
Institutions and other things: critical hermeneutics, postphenomenology and material engagement theory. 2189-2196 - Alberto Romele:
The datafication of the worldview. 2197-2206 - Stacey O. Irwin:
Digital hermeneutics for the new age of cinema. 2207-2215 - Kåre Stokholm Poulsgaard, Lambros Malafouris:
Understanding the hermeneutics of digital materiality in contemporary architectural modelling: a material engagement perspective. 2217-2227 - Robert Rosenberger:
On variational cross-examination: a method for postphenomenological multistability. 2229-2242 - Jure Zovko:
Expanding hermeneutics to the world of technology. 2243-2254 - Elise Li Zheng:
Interpreting fitness: self-tracking with fitness apps through a postphenomenology lens. 2255-2266 - Bas de Boer:
Explaining multistability: postphenomenology and affordances of technologies. 2267-2277 - Robert C. Scharff:
When is a phenomenologist being hermeneutical? 2279-2293 - Mrinmoy Majumder, Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Transformative power of technologies: cultural transfer and globalization. 2295-2303 - Samantha Jo Fried:
Satellites, war, climate change, and the environment: are we at risk for environmental deskilling? 2305-2313 - Val Dusek:
Patrick Heelan's phenomenology and hermeneutics of observation in quantum mechanics. 2315-2327 - Jesper Aagaard, Emma Steninge, Yibin Zhang:
On the hermeneutics of screen time. 2329-2337 - William A. Hanff:
Weaving science and digital media: postphenomenology's expanding hermeneutics. 2339-2345 - Stacey O. Irwin:
Eric T. Meyer and Ralph Schroeder: Knowledge machines: digital transformations of the sciences and humanities. 2347-2349 - Wessel Reijers:
Romele, Alberto (2020): Digital hermeneutics: philosophical investigations in new media and technologies. 2351-2354 - Emil Lensky:
Ginev, D. (2019). Scientific Conceptualization and Ontological Difference. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter 2019, pp. 280 + x. ISBN 978-3-11-060373-6. 2355-2357 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Shoshana Zuboff, The age of surveillance capitalism: the fight for a human future at the new frontier of power. 2359-2361 - Paul Downes:
Patrick Aidan Heelan's The observable: Heisenberg's philosophy of quantum mechanics, EPUB, ISBN 978-1-4541-9011-0 (New York: Peter Lang, 2016). 2363-2367 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis:
Ian Heywood and Barry Sandywell (eds.). Interpreting Visual Culture. Explorations in the Hermeneutics of the Visual. 2369-2373 - William A. Hanff:
Digital Media: Human-Technology Connection by Stacey Irwin, 2017, 198 pages, Lexington Books, 978-1-4985-3710-0, Paperback, $44.99. 2375-2376 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis:
Barry Sandywell. Dictionary of Visual Discourse. A Dialectical Lexicon of Terms; Routledge: London and New York. 2011. 722 pages. ISBN 9781138102408. 2377-2379 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis:
Bas de Boer, How scientific instruments speak. Postphenomenology and technological mediations in neuroscientific practice. Lexington books: the Rowman & Littlefield publishing group, Inc., 2020. 211 pages. ISBN 978-1-7936-2784-1 and 978-1-7936-2785-8 (electronic). 2381-2383 - Cathrine Hasse:
Correction: Material hermeneutics as cultural learning: from relations to processes of relations. 2385
- Ian Cross:
Music in the digital age: commodity, community, communion. 2387-2400 - Vibeke Sørensen, J. Stephen Lansing:
Art, technology and the Internet of Living Things. 2401-2417 - Kwan Queenie Li, Joel Austin Cunningham:
Performing Weedist. 2419-2425 - David M. J. Wood:
What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art. 2427-2436
- Mark Coeckelbergh:
Narrative responsibility and artificial intelligence. 2437-2450 - Maël Montévil:
Entropies and the Anthropocene crisis. 2451-2471 - Mark Ryan:
The social and ethical impacts of artificial intelligence in agriculture: mapping the agricultural AI literature. 2473-2485 - Rafal Szopa:
Ethical problems in the use of algorithms in data management and in a free market economy. 2487-2498 - Bernardo Gonçalves:
Can machines think? The controversy that led to the Turing test. 2499-2509 - Gert Jan Hofstede, Jillian Student, Mark R. Kramer:
The status-power arena: a comprehensive agent-based model of social status dynamics and gender in groups of children. 2511-2531 - Tomás Seosamh Harrington, Jagjit Singh Srai:
Designing a 'concept of operations' architecture for next-generation multi-organisational service networks. 2533-2545 - Anzhelika Solovyeva, Nik Hynek:
When stigmatization does not work: over-securitization in efforts of the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots. 2547-2569 - Louis Armand:
The posthuman abstract: AI, DRONOLOGY & "BECOMING ALIEN". 2571-2576 - Marcus Arvan:
Mental time-travel, semantic flexibility, and A.I. ethics. 2577-2596 - Katrin Paldan, Hanno Sauer, Nils-Frederic Wagner:
Promoting inequality? Self-monitoring applications and the problem of social justice. 2597-2607 - Fabio Tollon, Kiasha Naidoo:
On and beyond artifacts in moral relations: accounting for power and violence in Coeckelbergh's social relationism. 2609-2618 - Vladimir Tsyganov:
Artificial intelligence, public control, and supply of a vital commodity like COVID-19 vaccine. 2619-2628 - Sarah J. Becker, André T. Nemat, Simon Lucas, René M. Heinitz, Manfred Klevesath, Jean Enno Charton:
A Code of Digital Ethics: laying the foundation for digital ethics in a science and technology company. 2629-2639 - John W. Murphy, Carlos Largacha-Martínez:
Is it possible to create a responsible AI technology to be used and understood within workplaces and unblocked CEOs' mindsets? 2641-2652 - Norman Meisinger:
Blue collar with tie: a human-centered reformulation of the ironies of automation. 2653-2657 - Jan Kaiser, Germán Terrazas, Duncan C. McFarlane, Lavindra de Silva:
Towards low-cost machine learning solutions for manufacturing SMEs. 2659-2665 - Yong Jin Park, S. Mo Jones-Jang:
Surveillance, security, and AI as technological acceptance. 2667-2678 - Elias G. Carayannis, John Draper:
Optimising peace through a Universal Global Peace Treaty to constrain the risk of war from a militarised artificial superintelligence. 2679-2692 - Jianlong Zhou, Fang Chen:
AI ethics: from principles to practice. 2693-2703 - Xin Wei Sha, Gabriele Carotti-Sha:
Big Data. 2705-2708 - Luís Moniz Pereira:
A machine is cheaper than a human for the same task. 2709-2711 - Elizabeth O'Neill:
Digital wormholes. 2713-2715 - Janina Luise Samuel, André Schmiljun:
What dangers lurk in the development of emotionally competent artificial intelligence, especially regarding the trend towards sex robots? A review of Catrin Misselhorn's most recent book. 2717-2721 - Richard Ennals:
Peter R. A. Oeij, Diana Rus and Frank D. Pot (Editors): Workplace Innovation: Theory, Research and Practice. 2723-2724 - Diaa Ahmed Mohamed Ahmedien, Rachel Singel, María Lorena Pradal:
Manual-to-digital approach to reprocessing waste: a practice-based perspective towards redefining the environmental role of the arts. 2725-2727
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