[Air-L] Sociotechnical Consequences of AI Workshop at UNC Reminder Deadline Approaching: 15 July for Abstracts

Smith, Catherine SMITHCATH at ecu.edu
Mon Jul 8 05:45:19 PDT 2024


A timely conference. Maybe add environmental impacts of AI as a topic?  Recent newspaper Guardian (UK) reports Google's acknowledgement that it's emissions have increased 50% owing to AI products. In social news, locating data centers engages local concerns for environmental justice.

Thanks for considering,
Catherine F. Smith
Prof Emerita, ECU

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Sent: Monday, July 8, 2024 8:18 AM
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Subject: [Air-L] Sociotechnical Consequences of AI Workshop at UNC Reminder Deadline Approaching: 15 July for Abstracts

This email originated from outside ECU.


A kind reminder to submit your abstracts by July 15 midnight EST.

Call for Contributions

Sociotechnical Consequences of AI: An Interdisciplinary Exploration of Ethical, Organizational, Social, and Computational Dimensions

International Workshop at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA (in person)

13 September 2024, 9 am to 6 pm

Artificial Intelligence is increasingly permeating different areas of society and being integrated into daily work and leisure practices, organizational structures, and ways of thinking about the world. Some of the areas impacted by AI and relevant to contemporary discourses are information retrieval and knowledge production (business, science, journalism, librarianship and education), predictive and evaluative work (policing, climate science, health and prevention of disease, finance, insurance), as well as communication tasks (customer service, human resources/recruiting). Some of the pertinent topics related to AI include access and accessibility, social justice, interpersonal relationships, skills and competences, cognitive and behavioral changes, human-computer interaction and the division of labor between humans and machines. Discourse within these fields takes place along ethical, organizational, social and computational dimensions. These dimensions are deeply interrelated. Addressing these connections and intersections is essential for a comprehensive understanding of AI systems.

For this workshop, we invite contributions that focus not merely on one of the four dimensions but address at least two dimensions together in an interdisciplinary way. The workshop aims to not only discuss how tools, processes, and relations of AI operate, but for whom and why they (do not) work. Additionally, we want to render visible the people, resources, processes, materials and politics that are often a hidden part of the current AI discourse. We primarily welcome paper presentations but are also open to other suggestions for presentation formats.

The following list depicts some of the fields and aspects which are of interest for the workshop and can serve as starting points for discussions, but can be complemented by further aspects.

Ethical

● Diversity and inclusion (queer LGBT, minority, indigenous, disability)

● Social justice

● Environmental justice

● Access and use of copyrighted material

● Labor exploitation

Social

● Care work

● Relationships (human, socio-technical)

● Assistive technologies and impact



Organizational

● Employment

● Job (In)security

● Future of work // New work

● AI recruitment tools

● Human-AI collaboration



Computational

● Mechanics

● Practices of training computational models

● Data quality

● Bias

● Cybersecurity



Deadline for submission of abstract: 15 July 2024, midnight EST

Abstracts should be between 300 and 500 words. Applicants will be notified by July 22. Please send your abstracts to Laura Schelenz (laura.schelenz at uni-tuebingen.de<mailto:laura.schelenz at uni-tuebingen.de>). If you have any questions, feel free to contact us.

The transatlantic team of organizers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Tübingen includes Prof. Mohammad Hossein Jarrahi, PD Dr. Jessica Heesen, Prof. Dr. Regina Ammicht Quinn, Jan-David Bühler, Jana Hecktor, Lisa Koeritz, Jimmy McKinnell, and Laura Schelenz.


Laura Schelenz
Researcher

International Center for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities (IZEW)
University of Tübingen
Wilhelmstr. 19
72074 Tübingen
Germany
(Physical location: Lothar-Meyer-Bau, Wilhelmstr. 56, Room 250)
Phone: +49 7071 29-77985

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