


default search action
AI & Society, Volume 38
Volume 38, Number 1, February 2023
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Moving the AI needle: from chaos to engagement. 1-4 - Salvatore Sapienza
, Anton Vedder:
Principle-based recommendations for big data and machine learning in food safety: the P-SAFETY model. 5-20 - Gagan Deep Kaur:
Processing of grid-based design representations: a qualitative analysis of concurrent think-aloud protocols. 21-33 - Thilo Hagendorff, Kristof Meding:
Ethical considerations and statistical analysis of industry involvement in machine learning research. 35-45 - Alejo José G. Sison, Dulce M. Redín
:
A neo-aristotelian perspective on the need for artificial moral agents (AMAs). 47-65 - Timothy Childers, Juraj Hvorecký, Ondrej Majer
:
Empiricism in the foundations of cognition. 67-87 - Nello Cristianini, Teresa Scantamburlo
, James Ladyman:
The social turn of artificial intelligence. 89-96 - Peter Mantello, Manh-Tung Ho
, Minh Hoang Nguyen
, Quan-Hoang Vuong
:
Bosses without a heart: socio-demographic and cross-cultural determinants of attitude toward Emotional AI in the workplace. 97-119 - Takeshi Ebina
, Keita Kinjo:
Paradox of choice and sharing personal information. 121-132 - Eduard Fosch-Villaronga
, Simone van der Hof
, Christoph Lutz
, Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux
:
Toy story or children story? Putting children and their rights at the forefront of the artificial intelligence revolution. 133-152 - Jakob Mökander
, Maria Axente
:
Ethics-based auditing of automated decision-making systems: intervention points and policy implications. 153-171 - Mario Andrés Chalita
, Alexander Sedzielarz
:
Beyond the frame problem: what (else) can Heidegger do for AI? 173-184 - Rajakishore Nath
, Riya Manna
:
From posthumanism to ethics of artificial intelligence. 185-196 - Andrew Dana Hudson, Ed Finn, Ruth Wylie:
What can science fiction tell us about the future of artificial intelligence policy? 197-211 - Joshua Siegel
, Georgios Pappas
:
Morals, ethics, and the technology capabilities and limitations of automated and self-driving vehicles. 213-226 - Sabrina Hauser
, Johan Redström
, Heather Wiltse
:
The widening rift between aesthetics and ethics in the design of computational things. 227-243 - Irene Nandutu
, Marcellin Atemkeng, Patrice Okouma:
Integrating AI ethics in wildlife conservation AI systems in South Africa: a review, challenges, and future research agenda. 245-257 - Nancy S. Jecker:
Can we wrong a robot? 259-268 - Vladimir Tsyganov:
Socio-political stability, voter's emotional expectations, and information management. 269-281 - Josh Cowls, Andreas Tsamados, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:
The AI gambit: leveraging artificial intelligence to combat climate change - opportunities, challenges, and recommendations. 283-307 - Aníbal Monasterio Astobiza
, David Rodriguez Arias-Vailhen, Txetxu Ausín
, Mario Toboso
, Manuel Aparicio, Daniel López:
Attitudes about Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) technology among Spanish rehabilitation professionals. 309-318 - Isabella Hermann
:
Artificial intelligence in fiction: between narratives and metaphors. 319-329 - Jennings Byrd, Paige Paquette:
Frankenstein: a creation of artificial intelligence? 331-342 - Andy E. Williams:
Are wicked problems a lack of general collective intelligence? 343-348 - Mads Larsen:
Toward a dataist future: tracing Scandinavian posthumanism in Real Humans. 349-361 - Jakob Svensson
:
Artificial intelligence is an oxymoron. 363-372 - Yishu Mao
, Kristin Shi-Kupfer:
Online public discourse on artificial intelligence and ethics in China: context, content, and implications. 373-389 - Daniel J. Gervais:
Towards an effective transnational regulation of AI. 391-410 - Jessica Morley, Libby Kinsey, Anat Elhalal, Francesca Garcia, Marta Ziosi, Luciano Floridi:
Operationalising AI ethics: barriers, enablers and next steps. 411-423 - Yew-Kwang Ng
:
Could artificial intelligence have consciousness? Some perspectives from neurology and parapsychology. 425-436
Volume 38, Number 2, April 2023
- Satinder P. Gill:
Editorial: Beyond regulatory ethics. 437-438 - Angelo Trotta, Marta Ziosi, Vincenzo Lomonaco:
The future of ethics in AI: challenges and opportunities. 439-441 - Laura Sartori
, Giulia Bocca:
Minding the gap(s): public perceptions of AI and socio-technical imaginaries. 443-458 - Francesca Lagioia
, Riccardo Rovatti
, Giovanni Sartor
:
Algorithmic fairness through group parities? The case of COMPAS-SAPMOC. 459-478 - Francesca Foffano
, Teresa Scantamburlo
, Atia Cortés
:
Investing in AI for social good: an analysis of European national strategies. 479-500 - Steve J. Bickley
, Benno Torgler
:
Cognitive architectures for artificial intelligence ethics. 501-519 - Francesco Corea, Fabio Fossa, Andrea Loreggia, Stefano Quintarelli, Salvatore Sapienza:
A principle-based approach to AI: the case for European Union and Italy. 521-535 - Rosanna Fanni, Valerie Eveline Steinkogler, Giulia Zampedri, Jo Pierson:
Enhancing human agency through redress in Artificial Intelligence Systems. 537-547 - Benedetta Giovanola, Simona Tiribelli
:
Beyond bias and discrimination: redefining the AI ethics principle of fairness in healthcare machine-learning algorithms. 549-563 - Jorão Gomes Jr.
, Heder Soares Bernardino, Jairo Francisco de Souza, Enayat Rajabi:
Indexing, enriching, and understanding Brazilian missing person cases from data of distributed repositories on the web. 565-579 - Julián Goñi, Claudio Fuentes, María P. Raveau
:
An experiential account of a large-scale interdisciplinary data analysis of public engagement. 581-593 - Pradeep Paraman
, Sanmugam Anamalah
:
Ethical artificial intelligence framework for a good AI society: principles, opportunities and perils. 595-611 - David Steingard, Marcello Balduccini, Akanksha Sinha:
Applying AI for social good: Aligning academic journal ratings with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). 613-629 - Marc M. Anderson, Karën Fort:
From the ground up: developing a practical ethical methodology for integrating AI into industry. 631-645 - Artur Modlinski:
The psychological and ethological antecedents of human consent to techno-empowerment of autonomous office assistants. 647-663 - Justyna Stypinska
:
AI ageism: a critical roadmap for studying age discrimination and exclusion in digitalized societies. 665-677 - Seth D. Baum, Andrea Owe:
From AI for people to AI for the world and the universe. 679-680 - Inga Ulnicane
:
Against the new space race: global AI competition and cooperation for people. 681-683 - Andrés Morales-Forero
, Samuel Bassetto, Eric Coatanéa:
Toward safe AI. 685-696 - Amar Singh
, Shipra Tholia
:
Artificial Intelligence/Consciousness: being and becoming John Malkovich. 697-706 - Muhammad Anshari
, Mahani Hamdan, Norainie Ahmad
, Emil Ali, Hamizah Haidi
:
COVID-19, artificial intelligence, ethical challenges and policy implications. 707-720 - Barbara Catania, Giovanna Guerrini, Chiara Accinelli:
Fairness & friends in the data science era. 721-731 - Hyesun Choung, Prabu David
, Arun Ross:
Trust and ethics in AI. 733-745 - Ludovica Marinucci
, Claudia Mazzuca, Aldo Gangemi
:
Exposing implicit biases and stereotypes in human and artificial intelligence: state of the art and challenges with a focus on gender. 747-761 - Carlos Andres Salazar Martinez, Olga Lucía Quintero Montoya:
The ethics of algorithms from the perspective of the cultural history of consciousness: first look. 763-775 - Mark L. Ornelas, Gary Smith, Masoumeh Mansouri
:
Redefining culture in cultural robotics. 777-788 - Katarzyna Pfeifer-Chomiczewska
:
Intelligent service robots for elderly or disabled people and human dignity: legal point of view. 789-800 - Rajitha Ramanayake
, Philipp Wicke
, Vivek Nallur
:
Immune moral models? Pro-social rule breaking as a moral enhancement approach for ethical AI. 801-813 - Theresa Züger, Hadi Asghari:
AI for the public. How public interest theory shifts the discourse on AI. 815-828 - Antonio Carnevale
, Emanuela Tangari, Andrea Iannone, Elena Sartini:
Will Big Data and personalized medicine do the gender dimension justice? 829-841 - Mehdi Dastani, Vahid Yazdanpanah
:
Responsibility of AI Systems. 843-852 - A. K. Ajeesh
, S. Rukmini
:
Posthuman perception of artificial intelligence in science fiction: an exploration of Kazuo Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun. 853-860 - Brian Ball, Alexandros Koliousis:
Training philosopher engineers for better AI. 861-868 - Garrick Cabour, Andrés Morales-Forero
, Élise Ledoux, Samuel Bassetto:
An explanation space to align user studies with the technical development of Explainable AI. 869-887 - Caterina Berbenni-Rehm
:
Evidence-based AI, ethics and the circular economy of knowledge. 889-895 - Rahul Kumar Dass, Nick Petersen, Marisa Omori, Tamara Rice Lave, Ubbo Visser
:
Detecting racial inequalities in criminal justice: towards an equitable deep learning approach for generating and interpreting racial categories using mugshots. 897-918 - Andreas Cebulla
, Zygmunt L. Szpak
, Catherine Howell
, Genevieve Knight
, Mohammed Sazzad Hussain
:
Applying ethics to AI in the workplace: the design of a scorecard for Australian workplace health and safety. 919-935 - Robin Kopecky
, Michaela Jirout Kosová
, Daniel D. Novotný
, Jaroslav Flegr
, David Cerný
:
How virtue signalling makes us better: moral preferences with respect to autonomous vehicle type choices. 937-946 - Guglielmo Papagni, Jesse de Pagter
, Setareh Zafari
, Michael Filzmoser, Sabine T. Köszegi:
Artificial agents' explainability to support trust: considerations on timing and context. 947-960 - Erik Hermann:
Psychological targeting: nudge or boost to foster mindful and sustainable consumption? 961-962 - Lavindra de Silva, Alan Mycroft:
Toward trustworthy programming for autonomous concurrent systems. 963-965 - Emma Engström
, Karim Jebari:
AI4People or People4AI? On human adaptation to AI at work. 967-968 - Masoumeh Mansouri
:
A call for epistemic analysis of cultural theories for AI methods. 969-971 - Vivek Nallur
, Graham Finlay:
Empathetic AI for ethics-in-the-small. 973-974 - Davor Petreski
, Ibrahim C. Hashim:
Word embeddings are biased. But whose bias are they reflecting? 975-982 - Mohsin Murtaza
, Chi-Tsun Cheng, Mohammad Fard, John Zeleznikow
:
The importance of transparency in naming conventions, designs, and operations of safety features: from modern ADAS to fully autonomous driving functions. 983-993 - Matteo Fabbri:
Social influence for societal interest: a pro-ethical framework for improving human decision making through multi-stakeholder recommender systems. 995-1002 - Luciana Monteiro Krebs, Bieke Zaman, David Geerts
, Sonia Elisa Caregnato:
Every word you say: algorithmic mediation and implications of data-driven scholarly communication. 1003-1012 - Marcel Naudé, Kolawole John Adebayo, Rohan Nanda
:
A machine learning approach to detecting fraudulent job types. 1013-1024 - Richard Frissen
, Kolawole John Adebayo, Rohan Nanda
:
A machine learning approach to recognize bias and discrimination in job advertisements. 1025-1038
Volume 38, Number 3, June 2023
- Aale Luusua
, Johanna Ylipulli
, Marcus Foth
, Alessandro Aurigi
:
Urban AI: understanding the emerging role of artificial intelligence in smart cities. 1039-1044 - Michael Batty:
The emergence and evolution of urban AI. 1045-1048 - Kars Alfrink
, Ianus Keller
, Neelke Doorn, Gerd Kortuem
:
Tensions in transparent urban AI: designing a smart electric vehicle charge point. 1049-1065 - Lena Podoletz:
We have to talk about emotional AI and crime. 1067-1082 - Nitin Sawhney
:
Contestations in urban mobility: rights, risks, and responsibilities for Urban AI. 1083-1098 - Yu-Shan Tseng
:
Assemblage thinking as a methodology for studying urban AI phenomena. 1099-1110 - Fabio Iapaolo
:
The system of autono‑mobility: computer vision and urban complexity - reflections on artificial intelligence at urban scale. 1111-1122 - Anu Lehtiö
, Maria Hartikainen
, Saara Ala-Luopa
, Thomas Olsson
, Kaisa Väänänen
:
Understanding citizen perceptions of AI in the smart city. 1123-1134 - Tan Yigitcanlar
, Duzgun Agdas
, Kenan Degirmenci
:
Artificial intelligence in local governments: perceptions of city managers on prospects, constraints and choices. 1135-1150 - Giulio Mecacci, Simeon C. Calvert, Filippo Santoni de Sio:
Human-machine coordination in mixed traffic as a problem of Meaningful Human Control. 1151-1166 - Jouko Makkonen
, Rita Latikka
, Laura Kaukonen, Markus Laine, Kaisa Väänänen
:
Advancing residents' use of shared spaces in Nordic superblocks with intelligent technologies. 1167-1184 - Pooyan Doozandeh
, Limeng Cui
, Rui Yu:
Street surface condition of wealthy and poor neighborhoods: the case of Los Angeles. 1185-1192 - Anthony Vanky
, Ri Le
:
Urban-semantic computer vision: a framework for contextual understanding of people in urban spaces. 1193-1207 - Stephanie Sherman:
The Polyopticon: a diagram for urban artificial intelligences. 1209-1222 - Alexander Gaio
, Federico Cugurullo
:
Cyclists and autonomous vehicles at odds. 1223-1237 - Toby Walsh:
Will AI end privacy? How do we avoid an Orwellian future. 1239-1240 - Minna Ruckenstein
:
Time to re-humanize algorithmic systems. 1241-1242 - Jean Burgess
:
Everyday data cultures: beyond Big Critique and the technological sublime. 1243-1244 - Alessandro Aurigi
:
Urban AI depends: the need for (wider) urban strategies. 1245-1247 - Fabio Duarte, Barbro Fröding:
Watch out! Cities as data engines. 1249-1250 - Hira Sheikh
:
All knowledge is not smart: racial and environmental injustices within legacies of smart cities. 1251-1252 - Johanna Ylipulli:
Federico Cugurullo (2021): Frankenstein Urbanism: Eco, Smart and Autonomous Cities, Artificial Intelligence and the End of the City. 1253-1255 - Aale Luusua:
Katherine Crawford: Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence. 1257-1259
Volume 38, Number 4, August 2023
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Seeing beyond the lens of Platonic Embodiment. 1261-1266 - Michael Pflanzer
, Veljko Dubljevic, William A. Bauer
, Darby Orcutt
, George F. List
, Munindar P. Singh
:
Embedding AI in society: ethics, policy, governance, and impacts. 1267-1271 - Justin Grandinetti
:
Examining embedded apparatuses of AI in Facebook and TikTok. 1273-1286 - Stephen C. Slota
, Kenneth R. Fleischmann, Sherri R. Greenberg, Nitin Verma
, Brenna Cummings, Lan Li, Chris Shenefiel:
Many hands make many fingers to point: challenges in creating accountable AI. 1287-1299 - Jakob Stenseke
:
Artificial virtuous agents: from theory to machine implementation. 1301-1320 - Gloria Andrada
, Robert W. Clowes
, Paul R. Smart
:
Varieties of transparency: exploring agency within AI systems. 1321-1331 - Johannes Himmelreich
:
Against "Democratizing AI". 1333-1346 - Claudio Novelli
:
Legal personhood for the integration of AI systems in the social context: a study hypothesis. 1347-1359 - Frederico Freitas
, Todd Berreth, Yi-Chun Chen
, Arnav Jhala
:
Characterizing the perception of urban spaces from visual analytics of street-level imagery. 1361-1371 - Amanul Haque
, Nirav Ajmeri
, Munindar P. Singh
:
Understanding dynamics of polarization via multiagent social simulation. 1373-1389 - Jernej Kaluza
:
Far-reaching effects of the filter bubble, the most notorious metaphor in media studies. 1391-1393 - Paul Fyfe
:
How to cheat on your final paper: Assigning AI for student writing. 1395-1405 - Hendrik Kempt
, Jan-Christoph Heilinger, Saskia K. Nagel:
"I'm afraid I can't let you do that, Doctor": meaningful disagreements with AI in medical contexts. 1407-1414 - Ryan Jenkins
, Kristian J. Hammond
, Sarah Spurlock, Leilani Gilpin
:
Separating facts and evaluation: motivation, account, and learnings from a novel approach to evaluating the human impacts of machine learning. 1415-1428 - Yousif Hassan
:
Governing algorithms from the South: a case study of AI development in Africa. 1429-1442 - Piercosma Bisconti
, Davide Orsitto
, Federica Fedorczyk
, Fabio Brau
, Marianna Capasso
, Lorenzo De Marinis
, Hüseyin Eken
, Federica Merenda
, Mirko Forti
, Marco Pacini
, Claudia Schettini:
Maximizing team synergy in AI-related interdisciplinary groups: an interdisciplinary-by-design iterative methodology. 1443-1452 - Vahid Yazdanpanah, Enrico H. Gerding, Sebastian Stein, Mehdi Dastani, Catholijn M. Jonker, Timothy J. Norman, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn:
Reasoning about responsibility in autonomous systems: challenges and opportunities. 1453-1464 - Simone Borsci
, Ville V. Lehtola
, Francesco Nex
, Michael Ying Yang
, Ellen-Wien Augustijn
, Leila Bagheriye
, Christoph Brune
, Ourania Kounadi
, Jamy Li
, João L. R. Moreira, Joanne Van Der Nagel
, Bernard P. Veldkamp
, Duc Viet Le
, Mingshu Wang
, Fons Wijnhoven
, Jelmer M. Wolterink
, Raúl Zurita-Milla
:
Embedding artificial intelligence in society: looking beyond the EU AI master plan using the culture cycle. 1465-1484 - Femi Richard Omotoyinbo:
Smart soldiers: towards a more ethical warfare. 1485-1491 - Jonne Maas:
Machine learning and power relations. 1493-1500 - Nick Munn
, Dan Weijers
:
Corporate responsibility for the termination of digital friends. 1501-1502 - Keith Begley
:
Beta-testing the ethics plugin. 1503-1505
- Jean-Christophe Bélisle-Pipon
, Erica Monteferrante, Marie-Christine Roy
, Vincent Couture
:
Artificial intelligence ethics has a black box problem. 1507-1522 - Thomas Herrmann
, Sabine Pfeiffer
:
Keeping the organization in the loop: a socio-technical extension of human-centered artificial intelligence. 1523-1542 - Robert Epstein
, Maria Bordyug, Ya-Han Chen, Yijing Chen, Anna Ginther
, Gina Kirkish, Holly Stead:
Toward the search for the perfect blade runner: a large-scale, international assessment of a test that screens for "humanness sensitivity". 1543-1563 - Nuno David
:
Implementations, interpretative malleability, value-laden-ness and the moral significance of agent-based social simulations. 1565-1577 - Milos Agatonovic
:
The fiction of simulation: a critique of Bostrom's simulation argument. 1579-1586 - Sonia Jawaid Shaikh
, Ignacio Cruz
:
AI in human teams: effects on technology use, members' interactions, and creative performance under time scarcity. 1587-1600 - Angela Abreu Rosa de Sá
, Diego Moreira de Araujo Carvalho, Eduardo L. M. Naves
:
Reflections on epistemological aspects of artificial intelligence during the COVID-19 pandemic. 1601-1608 - Tilman Hartwig
, Yuko Ikkatai
, Naohiro Takanashi
, Hiromi M. Yokoyama
:
Artificial intelligence ELSI score for science and technology: a comparison between Japan and the US. 1609-1626 - Lee Valentine
, Simon D'Alfonso
, Reeva Lederman
:
Recommender systems for mental health apps: advantages and ethical challenges. 1627-1638 - James Smith, Tanya de Villiers-Botha
:
Hey, Google, leave those kids alone: Against hypernudging children in the age of big data. 1639-1649 - James Brusseau:
From the ground truth up: doing AI ethics from practice to principles. 1651-1657 - Johanna Johansen, Tore Pedersen
, Christian Johansen
:
Studying human-to-computer bias transference. 1659-1683 - Núria Vallès-Peris
, Miquel Domènech
:
Caring in the in-between: a proposal to introduce responsible AI and robotics to healthcare. 1685-1695 - Christian Hugo Hoffmann:
A philosophical view on singularity and strong AI. 1697-1714 - Kostas Terzidis, Filippo Fabrocini, Hyejin Lee:
Unintentional intentionality: art and design in the age of artificial intelligence. 1715-1724 - Luca M. Possati:
Psychoanalyzing artificial intelligence: the case of Replika. 1725-1738 - Outi Tuisku
, Satu Pekkarinen, Lea Hennala, Helinä Melkas:
Decision-makers' attitudes toward the use of care robots in welfare services. 1739-1752 - Steffen Krüger
, Christopher Wilson
:
The problem with trust: on the discursive commodification of trust in AI. 1753-1761 - Min-Sun Kim:
Meta-narratives on machinic otherness: beyond anthropocentrism and exoticism. 1763-1770 - Quoc Nguyen Phan, Chin-Chin Tseng, Le Thi Thu Hoa, Thi Bich Ngoc Nguyen:
The application of chatbot on Vietnamese misgrant workers' right protection in the implementation of new generation free trade agreements (FTAS). 1771-1783 - Jussi Salmi
:
A democratic way of controlling artificial general intelligence. 1785-1791 - Minatsu Sugimoto, Hiroo Iwata, Hiroya Igarashi:
Ankle-Worn Sensor Sleeve to increase walking motivation. 1793-1803
Volume 38, Number 5, October 2023
- Satinder P. Gill:
Why thinking about the tacit is key for shaping our AI futures. 1805-1808 - Satinder P. Gill:
AI & society, knowledge, culture and communication. 1809-1811 - Mihai Nadin:
Intelligence at any price? A criterion for defining AI. 1813-1817 - Mihály Héder
:
The epistemic opacity of autonomous systems and the ethical consequences. 1819-1827 - Bo Göranzon:
On dialogue and certainty. 1829-1836 - Melvin Chen
, Lock Yue Chew
:
Causal Reasoning and Meno's Paradox. 1837-1845 - Walter B. Gulick:
Machine and person: reconstructing Harry Collins's categories. 1847-1858 - Stamatia Portanova:
In and out of Wonderland: a criti/chromatic stroll across postdigital culture. 1859-1870 - Rebekah Wilson:
Aesthetic and technical strategies for networked music performance. 1871-1884 - Jonathan Impett
:
Music, discourse and intuitive technology. 1885-1896 - Ghislaine Boddington
:
The Internet of Bodies - alive, connected and collective: the virtual physical future of our bodies and our senses. 1897-1913 - Sha Xin Wei:
Writing in water: dense responsive media in place of relational interfaces. 1915-1923 - Anders Sandblad
:
On professional skill in the age of digital technology. 1925-1933 - Massimo Negrotti:
On the 'nature' of the 'artificial'. 1935-1940 - Marleen Wynants:
SWAMPLAB. 1941-1944 - Francesco Garibaldo, Emilio Rebecchi:
If I cannot move heaven, I will raise hell. 1945-1948 - Zsolt Ziegler
:
Michael Polányi's fiduciary program against fake news and deepfake in the digital age. 1949-1957 - Ignacio Nieto Larrain
, Marcelo Velasco, Christian Miranda
:
Tacit engagement using tablet-mediated learning for social good. 1959-1963 - Robert Rosenberger:
Against spectatorial utopianism. 1965-1966 - Tim Rein:
The dissolution of the condicio humana. 1967-1968 - Irving Massey:
Testing Turing. 1969-1970 - Carl Macrae
:
From Blade Runners to Tin Kickers: what the governance of artificial intelligence safety needs to learn from air crash investigators. 1971-1973 - Erik Hermann:
Artificial intelligence in marketing: friend or foe of sustainable consumption? 1975-1976 - Matthew Studley, Scott DeLahunta
:
Roots and models. 1977-1979
- Clare Foster, Ruichen Zhang
:
Special Issue: Iteration and persuasion as key conditions of digital societies. 1981-1986 - Ella McPherson
:
Witnessing: iteration and social change. 1987-1995 - Ana Belén Martínez García
:
Women activists' strategies of online self-presentation. 1997-2008 - Clare L. E. Foster:
Truth as social practice in a digital era: iteration as persuasion. 2009-2023 - Anthony Kelly
:
Recontextualising partisan outrage online: analysing the public negotiation of Trump support among American conservatives in 2016. 2025-2036 - Cathrine Hasse
:
Material hermeneutics as cultural learning: from relations to processes of relations. 2037-2044 - Filippo Pianca
, Vieri Giuliano Santucci
:
Interdependence as the key for an ethical artificial autonomy. 2045-2059 - Guobin Yang:
Online lockdown diaries as endurance art. 2061-2070 - Tomasz Hollanek
:
AI transparency: a matter of reconciling design with critique. 2071-2079 - Madeline Smith-Johnson:
Labor for community on Facebook. 2081-2092 - Ruichen Zhang
:
Re-directing socialist persuasion through affective reiteration: a discourse analysis of 'Socialist Memes' on the Chinese internet. 2093-2104 - Orysia Hrudka
:
'Pretending to favour the public': how Facebook's declared democratising ideals are reversed by its practices. 2105-2115 - Alan F. Blackwell:
Wonders without number: the information economy of data and its subjects. 2117-2118
Volume 38, Number 6, December 2023
- Jeffrey White, Dietrich Brandt, Jan Söffner, Larry Stapleton:
Artificial thinking and doomsday projections: a discourse on trust, ethics and safety. 2119-2124
- Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Hermeneutic of performing cultures. 2125-2132 - Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Transforming hermeneutics. 2133-2139 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis
:
Enactive hermeneutics and smart medical technologies. 2141-2149 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Machine hermeneutics, postphenomenology, and facial recognition technology. 2151-2158 - Galit Wellner:
Material hermeneutic of digital technologies in the age of AI. 2159-2166 - Dimitri Ginev:
A hermeneutics of scientific practices and the concept of "text". 2167-2176 - Babette Babich:
Material hermeneutics and Heelan's philosophy of technoscience. 2177-2188 - Tailer G. Ransom, Shaun Gallagher
:
Institutions and other things: critical hermeneutics, postphenomenology and material engagement theory. 2189-2196 - Alberto Romele
:
The datafication of the worldview. 2197-2206 - Stacey O. Irwin:
Digital hermeneutics for the new age of cinema. 2207-2215 - Kåre Stokholm Poulsgaard, Lambros Malafouris:
Understanding the hermeneutics of digital materiality in contemporary architectural modelling: a material engagement perspective. 2217-2227 - Robert Rosenberger:
On variational cross-examination: a method for postphenomenological multistability. 2229-2242 - Jure Zovko:
Expanding hermeneutics to the world of technology. 2243-2254 - Elise Li Zheng:
Interpreting fitness: self-tracking with fitness apps through a postphenomenology lens. 2255-2266 - Bas de Boer
:
Explaining multistability: postphenomenology and affordances of technologies. 2267-2277 - Robert C. Scharff:
When is a phenomenologist being hermeneutical? 2279-2293 - Mrinmoy Majumder, Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Transformative power of technologies: cultural transfer and globalization. 2295-2303 - Samantha Jo Fried
:
Satellites, war, climate change, and the environment: are we at risk for environmental deskilling? 2305-2313 - Val Dusek:
Patrick Heelan's phenomenology and hermeneutics of observation in quantum mechanics. 2315-2327 - Jesper Aagaard
, Emma Steninge, Yibin Zhang
:
On the hermeneutics of screen time. 2329-2337 - William A. Hanff:
Weaving science and digital media: postphenomenology's expanding hermeneutics. 2339-2345 - Stacey O. Irwin:
Eric T. Meyer and Ralph Schroeder: Knowledge machines: digital transformations of the sciences and humanities. 2347-2349 - Wessel Reijers:
Romele, Alberto (2020): Digital hermeneutics: philosophical investigations in new media and technologies. 2351-2354 - Emil Lensky:
Ginev, D. (2019). Scientific Conceptualization and Ontological Difference. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter 2019, pp. 280 + x. ISBN 978-3-11-060373-6. 2355-2357 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Shoshana Zuboff, The age of surveillance capitalism: the fight for a human future at the new frontier of power. 2359-2361 - Paul Downes:
Patrick Aidan Heelan's The observable: Heisenberg's philosophy of quantum mechanics, EPUB, ISBN 978-1-4541-9011-0 (New York: Peter Lang, 2016). 2363-2367 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis
:
Ian Heywood and Barry Sandywell (eds.). Interpreting Visual Culture. Explorations in the Hermeneutics of the Visual. 2369-2373 - William A. Hanff:
Digital Media: Human-Technology Connection by Stacey Irwin, 2017, 198 pages, Lexington Books, 978-1-4985-3710-0, Paperback, $44.99. 2375-2376 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis
:
Barry Sandywell. Dictionary of Visual Discourse. A Dialectical Lexicon of Terms; Routledge: London and New York. 2011. 722 pages. ISBN 9781138102408. 2377-2379 - Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis
:
Bas de Boer, How scientific instruments speak. Postphenomenology and technological mediations in neuroscientific practice. Lexington books: the Rowman & Littlefield publishing group, Inc., 2020. 211 pages. ISBN 978-1-7936-2784-1 and 978-1-7936-2785-8 (electronic). 2381-2383 - Cathrine Hasse
:
Correction: Material hermeneutics as cultural learning: from relations to processes of relations. 2385
- Ian Cross:
Music in the digital age: commodity, community, communion. 2387-2400 - Vibeke Sørensen, J. Stephen Lansing:
Art, technology and the Internet of Living Things. 2401-2417 - Kwan Queenie Li, Joel Austin Cunningham:
Performing Weedist. 2419-2425 - David M. J. Wood:
What the digital world leaves behind: reiterated analogue traces in Mexican media art. 2427-2436
- Mark Coeckelbergh
:
Narrative responsibility and artificial intelligence. 2437-2450 - Maël Montévil:
Entropies and the Anthropocene crisis. 2451-2471 - Mark Ryan
:
The social and ethical impacts of artificial intelligence in agriculture: mapping the agricultural AI literature. 2473-2485 - Rafal Szopa
:
Ethical problems in the use of algorithms in data management and in a free market economy. 2487-2498 - Bernardo Gonçalves
:
Can machines think? The controversy that led to the Turing test. 2499-2509 - Gert Jan Hofstede, Jillian Student
, Mark R. Kramer
:
The status-power arena: a comprehensive agent-based model of social status dynamics and gender in groups of children. 2511-2531 - Tomás Seosamh Harrington, Jagjit Singh Srai
:
Designing a 'concept of operations' architecture for next-generation multi-organisational service networks. 2533-2545 - Anzhelika Solovyeva, Nik Hynek
:
When stigmatization does not work: over-securitization in efforts of the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots. 2547-2569 - Louis Armand:
The posthuman abstract: AI, DRONOLOGY & "BECOMING ALIEN". 2571-2576 - Marcus Arvan:
Mental time-travel, semantic flexibility, and A.I. ethics. 2577-2596 - Katrin Paldan, Hanno Sauer, Nils-Frederic Wagner:
Promoting inequality? Self-monitoring applications and the problem of social justice. 2597-2607 - Fabio Tollon
, Kiasha Naidoo
:
On and beyond artifacts in moral relations: accounting for power and violence in Coeckelbergh's social relationism. 2609-2618 - Vladimir Tsyganov:
Artificial intelligence, public control, and supply of a vital commodity like COVID-19 vaccine. 2619-2628 - Sarah J. Becker
, André T. Nemat, Simon Lucas
, René M. Heinitz, Manfred Klevesath, Jean Enno Charton:
A Code of Digital Ethics: laying the foundation for digital ethics in a science and technology company. 2629-2639 - John W. Murphy
, Carlos Largacha-Martínez
:
Is it possible to create a responsible AI technology to be used and understood within workplaces and unblocked CEOs' mindsets? 2641-2652 - Norman Meisinger
:
Blue collar with tie: a human-centered reformulation of the ironies of automation. 2653-2657 - Jan Kaiser
, Germán Terrazas, Duncan C. McFarlane, Lavindra de Silva:
Towards low-cost machine learning solutions for manufacturing SMEs. 2659-2665 - Yong Jin Park, S. Mo Jones-Jang
:
Surveillance, security, and AI as technological acceptance. 2667-2678 - Elias G. Carayannis
, John Draper
:
Optimising peace through a Universal Global Peace Treaty to constrain the risk of war from a militarised artificial superintelligence. 2679-2692 - Jianlong Zhou
, Fang Chen
:
AI ethics: from principles to practice. 2693-2703 - Xin Wei Sha, Gabriele Carotti-Sha:
Big Data. 2705-2708 - Luís Moniz Pereira:
A machine is cheaper than a human for the same task. 2709-2711 - Elizabeth O'Neill
:
Digital wormholes. 2713-2715 - Janina Luise Samuel
, André Schmiljun
:
What dangers lurk in the development of emotionally competent artificial intelligence, especially regarding the trend towards sex robots? A review of Catrin Misselhorn's most recent book. 2717-2721 - Richard Ennals:
Peter R. A. Oeij, Diana Rus and Frank D. Pot (Editors): Workplace Innovation: Theory, Research and Practice. 2723-2724 - Diaa Ahmed Mohamed Ahmedien
, Rachel Singel, María Lorena Pradal:
Manual-to-digital approach to reprocessing waste: a practice-based perspective towards redefining the environmental role of the arts. 2725-2727

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.