SRI partners with the Canada School of Public Service to train public servants on AI
How can artificial intelligence improve public services and help create a more sustainable future? Can governments implement AI in ways that ensure fairness and transparency? To explore these questions, SRI has partnered with the Canada School of Public Service to present an eight-part series designed to explain what AI is, where it’s headed, and what public servants need to know about it.
Schwartz Reisman Institute appoints Monique Crichlow as Executive Director
With a storied career of service in healthcare, policy development, and technological innovation, Monique Crichlow has been appointed Executive Director at the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society.
SRI Seminar Series returns for 2022 to explore the latest research on AI and society
The SRI Seminar Series returns January 19, 2022 for a new season of weekly presentations, bringing together the Schwartz Reisman research community and beyond for a robust exchange of ideas that advance scholarship at the intersection of technology and society.
2022 call for SRI faculty and graduate fellowships now open for U of T researchers
Are you a U of T researcher who is passionate about ensuring new technologies are effective, safe, ethical, and fair? The Schwartz Reisman Institute welcomes faculty and graduate fellowship applications from U of T researchers from all academic disciplines.
Schwartz Reisman Institute announces inaugural Advisory Board
The SRI Advisory Board is composed of distinguished leaders in computer science, law, technological entrepreneurship and regulation, public policy, digital citizenship and inclusion, and global philanthropy. Its function is to provide guidance and recommendations to SRI’s leadership that will maximize the research and societal impact of the Institute.
We’re hiring! Join SRI as a postdoctoral fellow in computational behavioural modeling and analysis
Are you a scholar with a PhD in a computational discipline? The Schwartz Reisman Institute is hiring a new postdoctoral fellow to engage in a research program headed by Gillian Hadfield that will explore the phenomenon of human normativity and group coordination.
Absolutely Interdisciplinary conference sets out to explore new connections in human and machine normativity
This year’s Absolutely Interdisciplinary conference will forge new connections between researchers studying normativity in human and machine contexts, bringing academic disciplines together to develop novel approaches towards ensuring technology is aligned with human values. The conference runs from June 16-18, 2021.
New cohort of SRI graduate fellows expand research to digital labour, blockchain, morality, international security, and more
Hailing from a wide variety of disciplines, our graduate fellows represent the best and brightest U of T student researchers working on topics at the intersection of technology and society. The fellows will serve a one-year term at the Schwartz Reisman Institute.
New report from AI100 Study Panel examines biggest promises and most significant challenges of AI
Launched in 2014, the 100-Year Study on Artificial Intelligence (AI100) convenes leading thinkers from across a wide spectrum of fields to examine how the effects of AI will ripple through every aspect of how people work, live, and play. The initiative’s new report is out now, and features contributions from SRI Director Gillian Hadfield and SRI Associate Director Sheila McIlraith.
Four new SRI faculty fellows expand research to robotics, decolonialism, “moral machines,” and human rights
Rosalie Wang, Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed, Jason Plaks, and Anna Su join the Schwartz Reisman Institute to expand research on AI-enabled assistive and rehabilitation technologies, moral psychology and human-computer interaction, data practices in the Global South, and international human rights.
SRI Seminar Series returns for 2021–22 academic year
The SRI Seminar Series resumes this September, bringing together the Schwartz Reisman Institute’s research community and beyond for a robust exchange of ideas that advance scholarship at the intersection of technology and society. Seminars are held over Zoom on a weekly basis and are free and open to the public. Each session is led by a leading or emerging scholar and features extensive discussion.
Wendy H. Wong named to Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars
Wendy H. Wong’s research on non-governmental organizations and public policy focuses on the relationships between technology, data, and human rights. Wong has been named to the Royal Society of Canada’s College of College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, an honour that recognizes up-and-coming researchers who demonstrate high levels of achievement.