[Air-L] References for AI Literature

Michael Muller michael_muller at us.ibm.com
Fri Apr 2 06:33:23 PDT 2021


   Hello Ming-Yi,

   Yes, sorry, of course. The Seeber paper is here:
   [1]https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378720619303337
   .

   I may or may not know of theories that could be useful. What discipline
   are you writing in, or writing into? The definition of "theory" kind of
   depends on disciplinarity, in my experience.

   thanks,
   --michael
   -----
   Michael Muller, PhD, IBM Research, Cambridge MA USA
   pronouns: he/him/his
   ACM Distinguished Scientist
   ACM SIGCHI Academy


     ----- Original message -----
     From: Ming-Yi Wu <mingyiwu at att.net>
     To: Michael Muller <michael_muller at us.ibm.com>
     Cc: Air-L at listserv.aoir.org, goldkind at fordham.edu
     Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Air-L] References for AI Literature
     Date: Thu, Apr 1, 2021 16:23

     Hi, Michael, Lauri, and All, Thank you for your reply! I wonder
     whether there are theories or articles that may explain AIâs impacts
     on individuals and societies? BTW, do you have the full reference
     for Seeber et al. (2020)? â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â
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     Hi, Michael, Lauri, and All,



   Thank you for your reply!



   I wonder whether there are theories or articles that may explain AIâs
   impacts on individuals and societies?



   BTW, do you have the full reference for Seeber et al. (2020)?



   Thank you!



   Best,



   Ming-Yi

   Sent from my iPhone


     On Apr 1, 2021, at 2:14 PM, Michael Muller
     <michael_muller at us.ibm.com> wrote:


   
   Depending on what kinds of perspectives you want to apply, you might be
   interested to search for "machines as teammates" (especially the 600+
   research questions reported by Seeber et al., 2020), mixed-initiative
   user interfaces, mixed-initiative creative interfaces, and
   human-autonomy teaming.
   Also, you may be interested to read in the (overlapping) subfields of
   human centered data science, human centered machine learning, and human
   centered AI.

   best wishes,
   --michael
   -----
   Michael Muller, PhD, IBM Research, Cambridge MA USA
   pronouns: he/him/his
   ACM Distinguished Scientist
   ACM SIGCHI Academy


     ----- Original message -----
     From: Ming-Yi Wu <mingyiwu at att.net>
     Sent by: "Air-L" <air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org>
     To: Lauri Goldkind <goldkind at fordham.edu>
     Cc: "air-l at listserv.aoir.org" <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>
     Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Air-L] References for AI Literature
     Date: Thu, Apr 1, 2021 12:24

    Dear Lauri and All,
   Thank you for your reply!  It helps.
   I will read the articles that you share with me!
   Yes, I think people's perceptions about AI can definitely affect their
   adoption behaviors.  We are all using AI technologies nowadays.  As
   long as we are using a smart phone, we are using AI.  Now, a subsequent
   question is: what the positive and negative impacts of AI?
   Thank you for your help!
   Best,
   Ming-Yi
       On Wednesday, March 31, 2021, 04:19:33 PM EDT, Lauri Goldkind
   <goldkind at fordham.edu> wrote:

    Hi,I'm not sure if this is theoretical but it's a good overview report
   on American attitudes and perceptions of AI, there is also a lot of
   literature that cites the report if you want to follow where it's been.
   Artificial Intelligence: American Attitudes and Trends by Baobao Zhang,
   Allan Dafoe :: SSRN
   Best,Laauri
   _________________________________________
   Lauri Goldkind, PhD ~Editor in Chief, Journal of Technology in Human
   ServicesData Justice CollectiveAssociate Professor, Graduate School of
   Social Service, FordhamListen to my podcast interview with tech
   ethicist David Ryan Polgar
   [2]http://www.laurigoldkind.net/Let's  talk! Click here to book a time
   "The more the data banks record about each one of us, the less we
   exist." - Marshall McLuhan
   Illegitimi non carborundum
   On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 2:56 PM Ming-Yi Wu <mingyiwu at att.net> wrote:
   Dear Colleagues,
   I am wondering whether you know any theories that may explain people's
   perceptions about artificial intelligence (AI), applications of AI, and
   impacts of AI?  For example, are there any books or journal articles
   for me to read?
   When I presented my paper at Eastern Communication Association's
   (ECA's) annual conference last week, one of my panel participants asked
   me a question which is related to AI.  That's why I would would like to
   know about this.
   If you can share the AI theories, research findings, and references
   with me, it will be truly appreciated!
   Thanks,
   Ming-Yi
   Ming-Yi Wu, Ph.D.Graduate FacultyNortheastern University
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References

   1. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378720619303337
   2. http://www.laurigoldkind.net/Let's
   3. http://aoir.org/
   4. http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
   5. http://www.aoir.org/
   6. http://aoir.org/
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