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Ethics and Information Technology, Volume 26
Volume 26, Number 1, March 2024
- Anna Mikhaylovskaya, Élise Rouméas:
Building trust with digital democratic innovations. 1 - Ariel Guersenzvaig:
Can machine learning make naturalism about health truly naturalistic? A reflection on a data-driven concept of health. 2 - Andrea Aler Tubella, Marçal Mora Cantallops, Juan Carlos Nieves:
How to teach responsible AI in Higher Education: challenges and opportunities. 3 - Eleanor Drage, Kerry McInerney, Jude Browne:
Engineers on responsibility: feminist approaches to who's responsible for ethical AI. 4 - Thomas Montefiore, Paul-Mikhail Catapang Podosky:
The conceptual exportation question: conceptual engineering and the normativity of virtual worlds. 5 - Benedetta Giovanola, Simona Tiribelli:
Correction to: Weapons of moral construction? On the value of fairness in algorithmic decision-making. 6 - Aorigele Bao, Yi Zeng:
Embracing grief in the age of deathbots: a temporary tool, not a permanent solution. 7 - Paula Helm, Gábor Bella, Gertraud Koch, Fausto Giunchiglia:
Diversity and language technology: how language modeling bias causes epistemic injustice. 8 - Michael Klenk:
Ethics of generative AI and manipulation: a design-oriented research agenda. 9 - Miriam Gorr:
Is moral status done with words? 10 - Otello Palmini, Federico Cugurullo:
Design culture for Sustainable urban artificial intelligence: Bruno Latour and the search for a different AI urbanism. 11 - Tina Comes:
AI for crisis decisions. 12 - Joris Graff:
Moral sensitivity and the limits of artificial moral agents. 13 - J. K. G. Hopster:
Socially disruptive technologies and epistemic injustice. 14 - Dirk Helbing, Marcello Ienca:
Why converging technologies need converging international regulation. 15 - Anantharaman Muralidharan, Julian Savulescu, G. Owen Schaefer:
AI and the need for justification (to the patient). 16 - Chelsea Haramia:
Intentional astrobiological signaling and questions of causal impotence. 17 - Samuela Marchiori, Kevin Scharp:
What is conceptual disruption? 18
Volume 26, Number 2, June 2024
- Isabelle Hupont, David Fernández Llorca, Sandra Baldassarri, Emilia Gómez:
Use case cards: a use case reporting framework inspired by the European AI Act. 19 - Zachary Daus:
Socializing the political: rethinking filter bubbles and social media with Hannah Arendt. 20 - Leonie Koessler:
Fiduciary requirements for virtual assistants. 21 - Sabrina Blank, Celeste Mason, Frank Steinicke, Christian Herzog:
Tailoring responsible research and innovation to the translational context: the case of AI-supported exergaming. 22 - Paul Schütze:
The impacts of AI futurism: an unfiltered look at AI's true effects on the climate crisis. 23 - Andrej J. Zwitter:
Cybernetic governance: implications of technology convergence on governance convergence. 24 - Garry Young:
The gamer's dilemma: an expressivist response. 25 - Markus Herrmann, Andreas Wabro, Eva C. Winkler:
Percentages and reasons: AI explainability and ultimate human responsibility within the medical field. 26 - Mark Alfano, Ehsan Abedin, Ritsaart Reimann, Marinus Ferreira, Marc Cheong:
Now you see me, now you don't: an exploration of religious exnomination in DALL-E. 27 - Mirjam Faissner, Eva Kuhn, Regina Müller, Sebastian Laacke:
Detecting your depression with your smartphone? - An ethical analysis of epistemic injustice in passive self-tracking apps. 28 - Nathan Gabriel Wood:
Explainable AI in the military domain. 29
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