
How the evaluative nature of the mind might help in designing moral AI
In a recent SRI Seminar, Julia Haas explored a new conception of the human mind as fundamentally evaluative in nature. According to Haas, a senior research scientist in the Ethics Research Team at DeepMind, this insight could assist in designing expanded forms of artificial intelligence that incorporate moral questions.
Inaugural SRI Faculty Fellows build bridges between disciplines and forge new areas of research
Amidst the challenges of COVID-19, SRI’s inaugural cohort of Faculty Fellows (2020–2021) engaged important questions at the intersection of technology and society through research, output, and connection with the SRI community, developing new approaches towards the study of environmental justice, data privacy, democratic engagement, and learning.
Learning from machines: Karina Vold on what technology can teach us about being human
SRI Faculty Affiliate Karina Vold explores the intersections between philosophy and artificial intelligence, the relationship between humans and their tools, and the social and ethical implications of new technologies like GPT-3. As her research shows, technology has a lot to teach us about what it means to be human, and making sense of new tools sometimes requires—and creates—new concepts and ideas.
How algorithms can strengthen democracy: Ariel Procaccia on designing citizens’ assemblies
The practice of sortition, in which random selection is used to generate citizens’ assemblies, is a method of political representation as old as democracy itself. In a recent SRI Seminar, Harvard professor Ariel Procaccia discussed how better algorithms can ensure this process accurately represents population demographics. SRI Graduate Fellow Lillio Mok reflects here on the implications of Procaccia’s research.
What does it mean to consider religion when thinking about AI?
In an op-ed reflecting on the entwined histories of science and religion, 2020–21 SRI Graduate Fellow Suzanne van Geuns reconsiders the often-maligned position of faith-based traditions in the research of artificial intelligence and natural evolution, exploring the generative points of connection between these different approaches towards knowledge.
SRI Graduate Fellows invite submissions for 2022 workshop, “Technologies of trust”
The 2022 Schwartz Reisman Graduate Workshop invites graduate and early career scholars to present their work at a one-day, virtual event on June 20th, as part of Absolutely Interdisciplinary 2022. Organized by SRI’s Graduate Fellows, this year’s workshop centers on the theme of trust, broadly defined, and its relationship to technology and society.
SRI Kitchen Table explores data rights in a world of power imbalances, mass surveillance, and super-powered facial recognition
In the Schwartz Reisman Institute’s inaugural Kitchen Table event, Research Lead Wendy Wong and Faculty Fellow Anna Su hosted a wide-ranging discussion on the implications of human rights for data ownership and privacy, and how we can address the challenges of writing new rules for an increasingly digital world.
Hope, faith, and stories: What betting, witchcraft, and craftsmanship in rural Bangladesh teaches us about ethical pluralism and decolonizing AI
In a recent SRI Seminar, Faculty Fellow Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed demonstrated how the dominant model of AI ethics is insufficient to strengthen the voices of local communities in the Global South. Ahmed contends scholars should move away from “universal” notions of intelligence, and foster situated ethical practices that take into account local hopes, faith, and stories.
Why we shouldn’t “move fast and break things”: Shion Guha on the benefits of human-centered data science
SRI Faculty Affiliate Shion Guha joined U of T’s Faculty of Information in 2021 to help develop its new program in human-centered data science, a nascent field that he has co-authored a new textbook about. In this interview, Guha reflects on the challenges of using algorithmic decision-making in public policy, and how to make better data-driven systems by incorporating human-centered design.
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.