
New cohort of SRI faculty affiliates announced for 2024
The Schwartz Reisman Institute is pleased to announce the addition of 10 new faculty affiliates to its research community. Hailing from across the University of Toronto, the new cohort of faculty affiliates brings an array of expertise from diverse fields including sociology, Indigenous studies, philosophy, and computer science, enriching the scope of research conducted by SRI’s vibrant community.
SRI Seminar Series presents cutting-edge research on the social impacts of advanced technologies
The SRI Seminar Series returns for 2024 with 12 exciting presentations exploring how data-driven technologies are changing our world, including talks on economics, law, political science, privacy, behavioural science, linguistics, and the ethics of AI. Registration for all sessions is now open.
New SRI working group will explore the role of trust in human-ML interaction
Do we trust machine learning systems, and if so why? How can ML systems earn and maintain our trust? These and related questions will be explored by an interdisciplinary working group convened by Beth Coleman now accepting applications from PhD and postdoctoral researchers.
2024 call for Schwartz Reisman faculty and graduate fellowships now open
The Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society has launched its call for 2024 faculty and graduate fellowships, open to researchers at the University of Toronto whose work explores the social impacts of new technologies.
Rethinking AI regulation: CIFAR policy brief explores paths forward for regulating in a new world
What’s missing from current efforts to regulate artificial intelligence? SRI researchers author a new CIFAR AI Insights Policy Brief on bracing for large-scale economic, social, and legal change—and how policymakers can adapt governance infrastructure to an economy transformed by AI.
Redefining AI governance: A global push for safer technology
SRI policy researchers David Baldridge and Jamie Amarat Sandhu trace the landscape of recent global AI safety initiatives—from Bletchley to Hiroshima and beyond—to see how governments and public policy experts are envisioning new ways of governing AI as rapid advancements in the technology continue to present challenges to policymakers.
Kelly Lyons appointed Schwartz Reisman Institute interim director; Gillian Hadfield to remain as chair
Kelly Lyons takes on the role of interim director at the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society. Lyons’ extensive expertise in knowledge mobilization will serve to harness and propel the vast diversity of research across disciplines at SRI. The Institute’s inaugural director, Gillian Hadfield, will retain her position as Schwartz Reisman Chair in Technology and Society.
SRI faculty fellows advance interdisciplinary research on the social impacts of AI
The Schwartz Reisman Institute’s 2021–23 faculty fellows explored the social implications of new technologies, foregrounding the significance of ethics, equity, and human-centred values. Learn more about their research projects and how to apply for Schwartz Reisman fellowships.
Geoffrey Hinton fields questions from scholars, students during academic talk on responsible AI
U of T University Professor emeritus and “godfather of AI” Geoffrey Hinton delivered a lecture at Convocation Hall discussing whether large language models understand what they are doing and the existential risks posed by unfettered development of the technology he helped create.
New SRI white paper explores AI regulation through existing financial consumer protections
A new white paper published by the Schwartz Reisman Institute explores how synergies between AI regulation and existing consumer protection principles can be leveraged to ensure policy-makers do not need to start from scratch when it comes to developing governance for the use of AI in financial services.
To guarantee our rights, Canada’s privacy legislation must protect our biometric data
Amidst today’s broad social impacts of data, we must pay specific attention to the risks posed by facial recognition technology, writes Daniel Konikoff, who argues that Bill C-27’s failure to classify biometric data as sensitive suggests that the bill has an unstable grasp on our tricky technological present.
Gillian Hadfield named one of seven AI2050 senior fellows by Schmidt Futures
Seven new senior fellows, including SRI Director Gillian Hadfield, have been selected by Schmidt Futures to solve hard problems in artificial intelligence through multidisciplinary research, with up to USD $7 million in support.