Filtering by: “SRI Seminar Series”

SRI Seminar Series: Luciano Floridi, “What is the impact of AI on democracy?”
Apr
3

SRI Seminar Series: Luciano Floridi, “What is the impact of AI on democracy?”

Luciano Floridi is the founding director of the Digital Ethics Center at Yale University, where he is also a professor in the Cognitive Science Program. World-renowned as one of the most authoritative voices of contemporary philosophy, Floridi is a founding figure within the philosophy of information and one of the major interpreters of the digital revolution. He is deeply engaged with policy initiatives on the socio-ethical value and implications of digital technologies and collaborates closely on these topics with many governments and companies worldwide.

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SRI Seminar Series: Ann Copestake, “LLMs and the Information Layer"
Mar
27

SRI Seminar Series: Ann Copestake, “LLMs and the Information Layer"

Ann Copestake is a professor of computational linguistics at the Department of Computer Science and Technology at the University of Cambridge. Her research involves developing computer models of human languages, including explores the development of semantic models compatible with broad-coverage computational processing, and establishing the performance of deep learning systems according to linguistic criteria.

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SRI Seminar Series: Iason Gabriel, “The ethics of advanced AI assistants”
Mar
20

SRI Seminar Series: Iason Gabriel, “The ethics of advanced AI assistants”

Iason Gabriel is a staff research scientist at Google DeepMind whose work focuses on the ethics of artificial intelligence, including questions about AI value alignment, distributive justice, language ethics and human rights. Gabriel has contributed to several projects that promote responsible innovation in AI, including the creation of the ethics review process at NeurIPS.

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SRI Seminar Series: Marlène Koffi, “Unlocking innovation: The use of natural language processing to uncover scientific bias”
Mar
13

SRI Seminar Series: Marlène Koffi, “Unlocking innovation: The use of natural language processing to uncover scientific bias”

Marlène Koffi is an assistant professor in economics at the University of Toronto, and a faculty affiliate at the National Bureau of Economics Research and the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society. Koffi’s research interests are in the economics of innovation and science, and she is also interested in applying deep learning and artificial intelligence techniques for economics studies and public policies.

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SRI Seminar Series: Rohan Alexander, “Improving reproducibility in quantitative social sciences: A simulation-based workflow enhanced with large language models”
Mar
6

SRI Seminar Series: Rohan Alexander, “Improving reproducibility in quantitative social sciences: A simulation-based workflow enhanced with large language models”

Rohan Alexander is an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, jointly appointed in the Faculty of Information and the Department of Statistical Sciences, assistant director of CANSSI Ontario, a faculty affiliate at the Schwartz Reisman Institute, and a co-lead of the Data Sciences Institute’s Thematic Program in Reproducibility. Alexander’s research investigates how to develop workflows that improve the trustworthiness of data science.

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SRI Seminar Series: Vincent Conitzer, “Social choice and game theory for AI alignment”
Feb
28

SRI Seminar Series: Vincent Conitzer, “Social choice and game theory for AI alignment”

Vincent Conitzer is a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University where he directs the Foundations of Cooperative AI Lab, head of technical AI engagement at the Institute for Ethics in AI, and a professor of computer science and philosophy at the University of Oxford. Conitzer works on artificial intelligence, including the intersections between AI and game theory, and AI and ethics, and explores how to determine the objectives AI systems should pursue.

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SRI Seminar Series: Jon Kleinberg, “The challenge of understanding what users want: Inconsistent preferences and engagement optimization”
Feb
14

SRI Seminar Series: Jon Kleinberg, “The challenge of understanding what users want: Inconsistent preferences and engagement optimization”

Jon Kleinberg is a professor of computer science at Cornell University whose research focuses on issues at the interface of networks and information, with an emphasis on the social and information networks that underpin the web and other online media. In this talk, Kleinberg proposes a new method for optimizing user experience on online platforms based on an insight that users have inconsistent preferences, exploring new insights for interactions between design, behavioral science, and social media.

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SRI Seminar Series: Norman Sadeh, “Privacy in the age of AI and the Internet of Things”
Feb
7

SRI Seminar Series: Norman Sadeh, “Privacy in the age of AI and the Internet of Things”

Norman Sadeh is a professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, director of CMU’s Mobile Commerce Laboratory and its e-Supply Chain Management Laboratory, and co-director of the MSIT Program in Privacy Engineering. Sadeh’s research focus is mobile and pervasive computing, cybersecurity, online privacy, user-oriented machine learning, and semantic web technologies, and he is well known for his seminal work in AI planning and scheduling, supply chain management, automated trading, and negotiation. In this talk, he will present his recent research exploring how to overcome privacy challenges associated with contemporary data collection practices, and will describe some practical solutions aimed at empowering people to regain control over their data.

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SRI Seminar Series: Dylan Hadfield-Menell, “You can’t have AI safety without inclusion”
Jan
31

SRI Seminar Series: Dylan Hadfield-Menell, “You can’t have AI safety without inclusion”

Dylan Hadfield-Menell is an assistant professor at MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and runs the Algorithmic Alignment Group in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT. His research works to identify solutions to alignment problems that arise from groups of AI systems, principal-agent pairs such as human-robot teams, and societal oversight of machine learning systems.

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SRI Seminar Series: Lynette H. Ong, “Authoritarian statecraft in the digital age”
Jan
24

SRI Seminar Series: Lynette H. Ong, “Authoritarian statecraft in the digital age”

Lynette H. Ong is a professor in the Department of Political Science and the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy at the University of Toronto and the director of the Munk School China Initiative. Her research interests lie at the intersection of authoritarianism, contentious politics, and development. In this talk, she will examine how digital technologies have enabled new forms of control for autocratic governments to co-opt and repress dissent.

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SRI Seminar Series: Elizabeth Joh, “Computational research for equity in the legal system training program”
Jan
17

SRI Seminar Series: Elizabeth Joh, “Computational research for equity in the legal system training program”

Elizabeth Joh is the Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law at UC Davis School of Law, and a leading expert on policing, privacy, and technology. In this talk, Joh will examine how advanced surveillance technologies used by modern police forces create new forms of knowledge that expand the capacities of policing, arguing that we must understand these new tools as “experiments on communities.”

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SRI Seminar Series: Pinar Yildirim, “Automation, career values, and political preferences”
Jan
10

SRI Seminar Series: Pinar Yildirim, “Automation, career values, and political preferences”

Pinar Yildirim is an associate professor of marketing at the Wharton School and associate professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania who studies media, technology, and information economics, with a focus on the applied economics of online platforms, and effects of technology and AI. In this talk, Yildirim will explore how automation has impacted the US labour market, demonstrating that robotization is contributing to a loss of average local labour market career values, and that these changes have repercussions for investment in public infrastructure and political affiliations.

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SRI Seminar Series: Luke Stark, “Conjecture and the right to reasonable inference in AI/ML decision-making”
Nov
22

SRI Seminar Series: Luke Stark, “Conjecture and the right to reasonable inference in AI/ML decision-making”

Luke Stark is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Information & Media Studies at Western University who researches the ethical, historical, and social impacts of computational technologies, including how these tools mediate social and emotional expression, make inferences about people, and are reshaping our relationships to collective action, our selves, and each other.

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SRI Seminar Series: Tawanna Dillahunt, “Empowering marginalized job seekers: Rethinking digital platforms for equitable and alternative employment”
Nov
15

SRI Seminar Series: Tawanna Dillahunt, “Empowering marginalized job seekers: Rethinking digital platforms for equitable and alternative employment”

Tawanna Dillahunt is an associate professor at the University of Michigan’s School of Information whose research spans human-computer interaction and ubiquitous computing fields, including environmental, economic, and social sustainability. Dillahunt investigates, designs, builds, enhances, and deploys innovative digital tools to solve real-world problems that support the needs of people from historically excluded groups.

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SRI Seminar Series: Beth Simone Noveck, “Unlocking collective intelligence: AI’s role in enhancing democracy”
Nov
1

SRI Seminar Series: Beth Simone Noveck, “Unlocking collective intelligence: AI’s role in enhancing democracy”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Beth Simone Noveck, a professor at Northeastern University, where she directs the Burnes Center for Social Change and its partner projects, the GovLab, and InnovateUS. Noveck’s work focuses on using AI to reimagine participatory democracy and strengthen governance, and she has spent her career helping institutions incorporate more participatory and open ways of working.

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SRI Seminar Series: Arvind Narayanan, “Resistance or harm reduction?”
Oct
25

SRI Seminar Series: Arvind Narayanan, “Resistance or harm reduction?”

Arvind Narayanan is a professor of computer science at Princeton University and the director of the Center for Information Technology Policy. Narayanan led the Princeton Web Transparency and Accountability Project to uncover how companies collect and use personal information, and his work was among the first to show how machine learning reflects cultural stereotypes.

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SRI Seminar Series: Marzieh Fadaee, “Mastering language understanding with AI: How multilingualism shapes LLMs”
Oct
11

SRI Seminar Series: Marzieh Fadaee, “Mastering language understanding with AI: How multilingualism shapes LLMs”

Marzieh Fadaee is a senior research scientist at Cohere For AI, a non-profit research lab that seeks to solve complex machine learning problems and create more points of entry into machine learning research. Fadaee’s work is broadly interested in all aspects of natural language understanding, particularly in multilingual learning, data-conscious learning, robust and scalable models, compositionality, and interpretability.

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SRI Seminar Series: Salomé Viljoen, “Valuing social data”
Oct
4

SRI Seminar Series: Salomé Viljoen, “Valuing social data”

Salomé Viljoen is an assistant professor of law at the University of Michigan Law School who studies the information economy, the social impacts of automation, and how legal structures impact inequality. Viljoen’s current work is on the political economy of social data, including its legal status and implications, and algorithmic governance, particularly the use of economic optimization methods in relation to algorithmic fairness.

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SRI Seminar Series: Shion Guha, “Deconstructing risk in predictive risk models”
Sep
27

SRI Seminar Series: Shion Guha, “Deconstructing risk in predictive risk models”

Shion Guha is an assistant professor at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information and Department of Computer Science, and a 2023 SRI faculty fellow. Guha’s research interests are broadly in the nascent field of human-centered data science, which he helped develop, including the role of algorithmic decision-making in public services.

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SRI Seminar Series: Aaron Hertzmann, “Can computers create art?”
Sep
20

SRI Seminar Series: Aaron Hertzmann, “Can computers create art?”

Aaron Hertzmann is a principal scientist at Adobe Research and an affiliate professor at the University of Washington who is an expert in computer graphics, machine learning, and art. In this session, Hertzmann will discuss questions of authorship raised by generative AI tools that are able to create images, enabling new modes of artistic expression. Can AI algorithms be considered artists? Hertzmann will explore this issue in relation to previous technological developments, as well as the role of art as a social phenomenon.

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SRI Seminar Series: Sven Nyholm, “AI, responsibility gaps, and asymmetries between praise and blame”
Apr
5

SRI Seminar Series: Sven Nyholm, “AI, responsibility gaps, and asymmetries between praise and blame”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Sven Nyholm, Professor of the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. In this session, Nyholm will discuss “responsibility gaps” and asymmetries regarding praise and blame for outcomes produced by AI technologies, using contemporary examples such as text produced by large language models, accidents caused by self-driving cars, and medical diagnoses and treatment.

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SRI Seminar Series: David G. Rand, “How polarization can help solve the misinformation problem”
Mar
29

SRI Seminar Series: David G. Rand, “How polarization can help solve the misinformation problem”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes David G. Rand, professor of management science and brain and cognitive sciences at MIT, and the director of the Applied Cooperation Team. Bridging the fields of cognitive science, behavioural economics, and social psychology, Rand’s research helps to illuminate why people believe and share misinformation, better understand political psychology and polarization, and promote cooperation. In this session, Rand will explore how crowdsourcing misinformation identification may succeed because of, rather than in spite of, political polarization.

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SRI Seminar Series: Kobbi Nissim, “Do machine learning systems meet the requirements of legal privacy standards?”
Mar
22

SRI Seminar Series: Kobbi Nissim, “Do machine learning systems meet the requirements of legal privacy standards?”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Kobbi Nissim, the McDevitt Chair of Computer Science at Georgetown University, and an affiliate professor at Georgetown Law. Nissim’s research works towards establishing rigorous practices for privacy in computation, including the introduction of differential privacy techniques. He is particularly interested in intersection points between privacy and various disciplines within and outside computer science, including cryptography, machine learning, game theory, complexity theory, algorithmics, statistics, databases, and more recently privacy law and policy.

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SRI Seminar Series: Ariel D. Stern, “The digital revolution in health care: Challenges, opportunities, and the need for policy innovation”
Mar
15

SRI Seminar Series: Ariel D. Stern, “The digital revolution in health care: Challenges, opportunities, and the need for policy innovation”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Ariel D. Stern, an associate professor of business administration in the Technology and Operations Management Unit at Harvard Business School. In this talk, Stern will explore how the rapid innovations of digital technology are changing definitions and approaches towards healthcare by practitioners, institutions, and users, and why these changes require new and innovative approaches towards policy and regulation.

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SRI Seminar Series: Suresh Venkatasubramanian, “The Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights: Why, what, how, and what next?”
Mar
8

SRI Seminar Series: Suresh Venkatasubramanian, “The Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights: Why, what, how, and what next?”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Suresh Venkatasubramanian, a professor of computer science and data science at Brown University whose research focuses on algorithmic fairness and the impact of automated decision-making systems in society. Venkatasubramanian recently finished an appointment as Assistant Director for Science and Justice in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, where he helped to co-author the Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights.

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SRI Seminar Series: Jennifer Raso, “Concentrated power, diffused agency: The effects of digitalized border administration”
Mar
1

SRI Seminar Series: Jennifer Raso, “Concentrated power, diffused agency: The effects of digitalized border administration”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Jennifer Raso, an assistant professor at McGill University’s Faculty of Law whose research investigates the relationship between data-driven technologies and administrative law. In this session, Raso explores how the digitalization of border administration simultaneously concentrates state power while diffusing agency, reflecting on what this means for legal accountability and decision-making.

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SRI Seminar Series: Owain Evans, “Truthful language models and AI alignment”
Feb
15

SRI Seminar Series: Owain Evans, “Truthful language models and AI alignment”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Owain Evans, a research associate at Oxford University’s Future of Humanity Institute. Evans’ research interests are in AI safety and the future of AI, with a current focus on truthful and honest AI. In this talk, Evans will present recent work on defining and measuring “truthfulness” in the context of large language models, including their calibration, and their ability to forecast world events.

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SRI Seminar Series: Jonathon Penney, “Chilling effects and the future automated legal enforcement”
Feb
8

SRI Seminar Series: Jonathon Penney, “Chilling effects and the future automated legal enforcement”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Jonathon Penney, an associate professor at York University’s Osgoode Hall Law School, a research affiliate at Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society and a research fellow at the Citizen Lab. In this talk, Penney will explore how the automation of legal enforcement is generating serious risks for privacy and human rights. Amidst a lack of guidance for lawmakers and policymakers grappling with these issues, Penney will consider the social impacts of these technologies, the shortcomings of typical regulatory solutions, new research that attempts to measure the “chill” effects of automated legal enforcement, and possible solutions and alternatives from a policy- and human rights-oriented perspective.

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SRI Seminar Series: Jon Lindsay, “Age of deception: The paradox of cooperative conflict in cyberspace”
Feb
1

SRI Seminar Series: Jon Lindsay, “Age of deception: The paradox of cooperative conflict in cyberspace”

Our weekly SRI Seminar Series welcomes Jon Lindsay, an associate professor at the School of Cybersecurity and Privacy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Lindsay is the author of numerous publications in international relations, intelligence studies, and the sociology of technology. In this talk, Lindsay will explore how techniques of cybersecurity update forms of covert political behaviour which he terms “secret statecraft.”

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