
Influx of right-wing users led to much greater Reddit polarization before 2016 U.S. election
In a new paper published, SRI Faculty Affiliate Ashton Anderson uses machine learning to demonstrate the 2016 rise in online political polarization was driven by a growth in new, largely right-wing, users, rather than the radicalization of existing users. Anderson’s data challenges the theory that online echo chambers are a primary cause of polarization.
New ideas and connections as Absolutely Interdisciplinary takes off
Absolutely Interdisciplinary 2021 brought together over 270 participants from around the world, to explore the theme of “Human and Machine Normativity: New Connections.” The conference brought together researchers working on similar questions from a variety of disciplines in order to map out new terrain for thinking about human and machine normativity.
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.
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.
Privacy study sheds light on why we grant or deny app requests
SRI Research Leads Lisa Austin and David Lie are part of a multidisciplinary team behind a new global study that explores the privacy expectations and behaviour of smartphone users.
What happens when we become data? Wendy H. Wong explores the consequences of datafication
SRI Research Lead Wendy H. Wong examines the issues at stake around facial-recognition technology, and their impacts on human rights and consent. Wong argues data alters basic conceptions of autonomy and dignity in ways that “profoundly change human experience”—leading to a need to reconsider the framework of human rights for the digital era.
Algorithms in art and culture: New publication explores music in the age of AI
How are algorithms influencing the production and consumption of culture? A new white paper on AI, music recommendation, and cultural consumption released by the Schwartz Reisman Institute argues their impacts are profound and far-reaching.
2021 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 spanning the sciences, social sciences, and humanities.
The past, present, and future of digital privacy for youth and children: Part II
In the second of two posts, Leslie Regan Shade, Monica Jean Henderson, and Katie Mackinnon explore research on children’s and youth’s experiences of online spaces, their needs for privacy protection, and how conceptions of digital tools and the corporations that make them can be better informed through digital literacy.
The past, present, and future of digital privacy for youth and children: Part I
In the first of two posts, Leslie Regan Shade, Monica Jean Henderson, and Katie Mackinnon explore the implications of Bill C-11 in terms of impacts on digital privacy for youth and children. The authors reflect on the need to balance online risks and opportunities for minors in the context of their research with The eQuality Project.
Agency, goals, and perspective: how do natural or artificial agents understand the world?
When we say that something is good or bad, is that a claim about objective facts, or something dependent on our perspective? Guest blogger Cory Travers Lewis reflects on Denis Walsh’s way of thinking about norms—one which treats them as both objective facts and as dependent on the perspective of particular living things.
Moving away from AI ethics as “window-dressing” to scientifically informed policies
SRI Graduate Fellow Shabnam Haghzare reflects on Joanna J. Bryson’s seminar about AI ethics, AI as human-authored tool, and the need for AI regulation in the service of public good. Bryson is professor of ethics and technology at the Hertie School in Berlin.