✍️ Column by Rosalie Waelen, a philosopher and applied ethicist, who recently completed her Ph.D. at the University of Twente (The Netherlands) and is now working as a Senior Researcher at the Sustainable AI Lab of the … [Read more...] about Regulating computer vision & the ongoing relevance of AI ethics
Broadening the Algorithm Auditing Lens to Investigate Targeted Advertising
🔬 Research Summary by Michelle S. Lam , a Computer Science Ph.D. student at Stanford University in the Human-Computer Interaction Group, where she builds systems that empower everyday users to actively reshape the design … [Read more...] about Broadening the Algorithm Auditing Lens to Investigate Targeted Advertising
Melting contestation: insurance fairness and machine learning
🔬 Research Summary by Laurence Barry and Arthur Charpentier. Laurence Barry is an independent actuary and a researcher at PARI (Programme de Recherche sur l’Appréhension des Risques et des Incertitudes, ENSAE/ … [Read more...] about Melting contestation: insurance fairness and machine learning
Science Communications for Explainable Artificial Intelligence
🔬 Research Summary by Simon Hudson , a writer and researcher investigating subjects in AI governance, human-machine collaboration, and Science Communications, and is currently co-leading the core team behind Botto, a … [Read more...] about Science Communications for Explainable Artificial Intelligence
When Are Two Lists Better than One?: Benefits and Harms in Joint Decision-making
🔬 Research Summary by Kate Donahue , a Computer Science PhD student at Cornell who studies on the societal impacts of AI. [Original paper by Kate Donahue, Sreenivas Gollapudi, and Kostas Kollias] Overview: … [Read more...] about When Are Two Lists Better than One?: Benefits and Harms in Joint Decision-making