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AI & Society, Volume 40
Volume 40, Number 1, January 2025
- Stephen Cowley:
Doing agency: how agents adapt in wide systems. 1-3 - Daniela Brill, Claudia Schnugg, Christian Stary
:
The socio-aesthetic construction of meaning in digitally mediated environments: a digital sensemaking approach. 5-19 - Regine Rørstad Torbjørnsen
, Inês Hipólito
:
Widening the screen: embodied cognition and audiovisual online social interaction in the digital age. 21-35 - Sara Mann
:
Understanding via exemplification in XAI: how explaining image classification benefits from exemplars. 37-52 - Francisco Lara
, Blanca Rodríguez-López:
Socratic nudges, virtual moral assistants and the problem of autonomy. 53-65 - Deborah G. Johnson, Mario Verdicchio
:
The sociotechnical entanglement of AI and values. 67-76 - Paul R. Brewer
, Liam Cuddy
, Wyatt Dawson
, Robert Stise
:
Artists or art thieves? media use, media messages, and public opinion about artificial intelligence image generators. 77-87 - Lucas Scripter
:
The achievement gap thesis reconsidered: artificial intelligence, automation, and meaningful work. 89-102 - Simona Chiodo:
From Phoebus to witches to death clocks: why we are taking predictive technologies to the extreme. 103-115 - Seunga Venus Jin
, Vijay Viswanathan
:
"Threatened and empty selves following AI-based virtual influencers": comparison between followers and non-followers of virtual influencers in AI-driven digital marketing. 117-131 - Thomas Cantens
:
How will the state think with ChatGPT? The challenges of generative artificial intelligence for public administrations. 133-144 - Yuwei Wang
, Enmeng Lu, Zizhe Ruan, Yao Liang, Yi Zeng:
Stream: social data and knowledge collective intelligence platform for TRaining Ethical AI Models. 145-153 - Itai Bavli
, Anita Ho
, Ravneet Mahal, Martin J. McKeown
:
Ethical concerns around privacy and data security in AI health monitoring for Parkinson's disease: insights from patients, family members, and healthcare professionals. 155-165 - Christian Montag
, Raian Ali
, Kenneth L. Davis:
Affective neuroscience theory and attitudes towards artificial intelligence. 167-174 - Erez Firt:
What makes full artificial agents morally different. 175-184 - Alexander Blanchard, Christopher Thomas, Mariarosaria Taddeo
:
Ethical governance of artificial intelligence for defence: normative tradeoffs for principle to practice guidance. 185-198 - Malak Sadek
, Emma Kallina
, Thomas Bohné, Céline Mougenot, Rafael A. Calvo, Stephen Cave
:
Challenges of responsible AI in practice: scoping review and recommended actions. 199-215 - Steven R. Kraaijeveld
:
AI-generated art and fiction: signifying everything, meaning nothing? 217-219 - David Chun Yin Li
:
The synergistic potential of AI and blockchain for organizations. 221-222 - Ayorinde Ogunyiola
:
The changing face of Agrarian labor in the age of artificial intelligence and machine learning: balancing benefits and risks. 223-224 - Hazel T. Biana
, Jeremiah Joven Joaquin
:
The irony of AI in a low-to-middle-income country. 225-226 - Manh-Toan Ho
:
Should Animal Crossing be environmentally conscious? 227-228 - Rebecca Raper
:
A comment on the pursuit to align AI: we do not need value-aligned AI, we need AI that is risk-averse. 229-231 - Rayyan Dabbous
:
Why we should design less privileged AI systems. 233-234 - Ariel Guersenzvaig
, Javier Sánchez-Monedero
:
AI research assistants, intrinsic values, and the science we want. 235-237 - Yoshija Walter
:
Artificial influencers and the dead internet theory. 239-240 - Mamun Rashid
:
Architect, AI and the maximiser scenario. 241-243 - Max Tretter
:
When discussing the desirability of religious robots: courage for theology! 245-247 - Noel Carroll
:
Are we inventing ourselves out of our own usefulness? Striking a balance between creativity and AI. 249-251 - Gabriel Lanyi
:
The age of machinoids. 253-254 - Nguyen Thi Thanh Huyen
:
Mark Amerika: My life as an artificial creative intelligence. 255-256
Volume 40, Number 2, February 2025
- Karamjit S. Gill:
The end AI innocence: genie is out of the bottle. 257-261 - Siri Beerends
, Ciano Aydin
:
Negotiating the authenticity of AI: how the discourse on AI rejects human indeterminacy. 263-276 - Lee Hadlington, Maria Karanika-Murray, Jane Slater
, Jens F. Binder
, Sarah Gardner
, Sarah Knight:
Public perceptions of the use of artificial intelligence in Defence: a qualitative exploration. 277-290 - Morgan Luck
:
Freedom, AI and God: why being dominated by a friendly super-AI might not be so bad. 291-298 - Giorgia Pozzi
, Juan M. Durán
:
From ethics to epistemology and back again: informativeness and epistemic injustice in explanatory medical machine learning. 299-310 - Jens Christian Bjerring
, Jacob Busch:
Artificial intelligence and identity: the rise of the statistical individual. 311-323 - David Guile
, Jelena Popov:
Machine learning and human learning: a socio-cultural and -material perspective on their relationship and the implications for researching working and learning. 325-338 - Claudio Celis Bueno
, Pei-Sze Chow
, Ada Popowicz:
Not "what", but "where is creativity?": towards a relational-materialist approach to generative AI. 339-351 - Teresa Scantamburlo
, Joachim Baumann
, Christoph Heitz
:
On prediction-modelers and decision-makers: why fairness requires more than a fair prediction model. 353-369 - John McLoughlin
:
The work of art in the age of artificial intelligibility. 371-383 - Marie-Theres Fester-Seeger
:
Human presencing: an alternative perspective on human embodiment and its implications for technology. 385-403 - Mona Nabil Demaidi
:
Artificial intelligence national strategy in a developing country. 423-435 - Oliver Bendel
:
Image synthesis from an ethical perspective. 437-446 - Benedikt Fecher
, Marcel Hebing, Melissa Laufer, Jörg Pohle, Fabian Sofsky:
Friend or foe? Exploring the implications of large language models on the science system. 447-459 - María de Los Ángeles Palacios Barea
, D. Boeren, J. F. Ferreira Goncalves:
At the intersection of humanity and technology: a technofeminist intersectional critical discourse analysis of gender and race biases in the natural language processing model GPT-3. 461-479 - Jennifer Burwell
:
The art of the semi-living: ethics of care and the bioart of Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr. 481-491 - Jonas Schuett
:
Three lines of defense against risks from AI. 493-507 - Francesco Abbate
:
An analysis of informational power transformations: from modern state to the new regime of performativity. 509-520 - Eric Mullis
:
How to dance, robot? 521-528 - James Muldoon
, Callum Cant, Mark Graham, Funda Ustek-Spilda
:
The poverty of ethical AI: impact sourcing and AI supply chains. 529-543 - Bokolo Anthony Jnr.
:
User-centered AI-based voice-assistants for safe mobility of older people in urban context. 545-568 - Andreia Martinho
:
Surveying Judges about artificial intelligence: profession, judicial adjudication, and legal principles. 569-584 - Oliver Bown
:
Blind search and flexible product visions: the sociotechnical shaping of generative music engines. 585-603 - Paul Hayes
, Noel Fitzpatrick:
Narrativity and responsible and transparent ai practices. 605-625 - Shiri Lieber-Milo
, Yair Amichai-Hamburger, Tomoko Yonezawa
, Kazunori Sugiura:
Cuteness in avatar design: a cross-cultural study on the influence of baby schema features and other visual characteristics. 627-637 - Sarah Pink
, Emma Quilty, John Grundy, Rashina Hoda:
Trust, artificial intelligence and software practitioners: an interdisciplinary agenda. 639-652 - Charles Shaaba Saba
, Nara Monkam:
Leveraging the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in exploring the interplay among tax revenue, institutional quality, and economic growth in the G-7 countries. 653-675 - Bojan Obrenovic, Xiao Gu
, Guoyu Wang, Danijela Godinic, Ilimdorjon Jakhongirov:
Generative AI and human-robot interaction: implications and future agenda for business, society and ethics. 677-690 - Andrea Slane
, Isabel Pedersen
:
Bringing older people's perspectives on consumer socially assistive robots into debates about the future of privacy protection and AI governance. 691-710 - Nupoor Ranade
, Marly Saravia, Aditya Johri
:
Using rhetorical strategies to design prompts: a human-in-the-loop approach to make AI useful. 711-732 - Bin Hong
, Yihang Guo, Meimei Chen, Yahui Nie, Changyuan Feng, Fugeng Li:
Collaborative route map and navigation of the guide dog robot based on optimum energy consumption. 733-739 - Nenad Tomasev
, Jonathan Leader Maynard, Iason Gabriel
:
Manifestations of xenophobia in AI systems. 741-763 - Nicolas Chartier-Edwards
, Marek Blottière, Jonathan Roberge:
AI statecraft heating-up: the automation of governance through Canada's Chinook case study. 765-774 - Aybike Tunç
:
Can AI determine its own future? 775-786 - Rajeev Kumar
, Saswat Kishore Mishra:
Assessing the impact of heat vulnerability on urban public spaces using a fuzzy-based unified computational technique. 787-804 - Miguel Angelo de Abreu de Sousa
:
The shift of Artificial Intelligence research from academia to industry: implications and possible future directions. 805-814 - Yehui Zhang:
From the essence of humanity to the essence of intelligence, and AI in the future society. 815-823 - Christos Kouroutzas, Venetia Palamari
:
Opening the black boxes of the black carpet in the era of risk society: a sociological analysis of AI, algorithms and big data at work through the case study of the Greek postal services. 825-838 - Jeffrey Benjamin White
:
Augmenting morality through ethics education: the ACTWith model. 839-858 - Lucas Freund:
Beyond the physical self: understanding the perversion of reality and the desire for digital transcendence via digital avatars in the context of Baudrillard's theory. 859-875 - Tanja Carstensen
, Kathrin Ganz
:
Gendered AI: German news media discourse on the future of work. 877-889 - Klaus Behnam Shad
:
Artificial intelligence-related anomies and predictive policing: normative (dis)orders in liberal democracies. 891-902 - Leah Henrickson
, Albert Meroño-Peñuela
:
Prompting meaning: a hermeneutic approach to optimising prompt engineering with ChatGPT. 903-918 - Evgeni Aizenberg
, Matthew Dennis, Jeroen van den Hoven:
Examining the assumptions of AI hiring assessments and their impact on job seekers' autonomy over self-representation. 919-927 - Eleri Lillemäe
, Kairi Talves
, Wolfgang Wagner
:
Public perception of military AI in the context of techno-optimistic society. 929-943 - Stefano Calzati, Bastiaan van Loenen
:
Beyond federated data: a data commoning proposition for the EU's citizen-centric digital strategy. 945-957 - Simon Goldstein, Cameron Domenico Kirk-Giannini
:
Language agents reduce the risk of existential catastrophe. 959-969 - Pankaj Kumar Maskara
:
Developing safer AI-concepts from economics to the rescue. 971-983 - Mark Ressler
:
Automated inauthenticity. 985-994 - Fabian Fischbach
, Tijs Vandemeulebroucke
, Aimee van Wynsberghe:
Mind who's testing: Turing tests and the post-colonial imposition of their implicit conceptions of intelligence. 995-1006 - Marcus Smith
, Seumas Miller
:
Technology, institutions and regulation: towards a normative theory. 1007-1017 - Anna Puzio
:
Robot, let us pray! Can and should robots have religious functions? An ethical exploration of religious robots. 1019-1035 - Dario Cecchini
, Sean Brantley, Veljko Dubljevic
:
Moral judgment in realistic traffic scenarios: moving beyond the trolley paradigm for ethics of autonomous vehicles. 1037-1048 - Andrea Berber
:
Automated decision-making and the problem of evil. 1049-1058 - Aliya Kintonova
, Galimzhan Gabdreshov, Timur Yensebaev, Rizvangul Sadykova, Nurbek Yensebayev
, Sultan Kulbasov, Daulet Magzymov:
Experiment on teaching visually impaired and blind children using a mobile electronic alphabetic braille trainer. 1059-1074 - Clement Guitton
, Simon Mayer, Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux
, Dimitri Van Landuyt
, Eduard Fosch-Villaronga
, Irene Kamara, Przemyslaw Palka
:
Responsible automatically processable regulation. 1075-1090 - Mohammad Naiseh
, Jediah R. Clark
, Tugra Akarsu
, Yaniv Hanoch
, Mario Brito
, Mike Wald, Thomas Webster, Paurav Shukla
:
Trust, risk perception, and intention to use autonomous vehicles: an interdisciplinary bibliometric review. 1091-1111 - Nathaniel Sharadin
:
Spot the bot. 1113-1115 - Angela Misri
:
Poisoning an already poisoned well. 1117-1118 - Aida Ponce Del Castillo
:
The role of collective agreements in times of uncertain AI governance: lessons from the Hollywood scriptwriters' agreement. 1119-1120 - Xiaofan Liu
, Baichang Zhong
:
What to consider before incorporating generative AI into schools? 1121-1123 - Mariusz Baranowski
:
The database construction of reality in the age of AI: the coming revolution in sociology? 1125-1127 - Christian Montag
, Preslav Nakov
, Raian Ali
:
On the need to develop nuanced measures assessing attitudes towards AI and AI literacy in representative large-scale samples. 1129-1130 - Chenjun Wang
, Naren Chitty
:
How far should we allow machines to further externalize human internal expression? 1131-1133 - Anthony Chambers, Nate Lewis:
Lessons from the California Gold Rush of 1849: prudence and care before advancing generative AI initiatives within your enterprise. 1135-1136 - Quan-Hoang Vuong
, Manh-Tung Ho
:
Abundance of words versus poverty of mind: the hidden human costs co-created with LLMs. 1137-1138 - Manh-Tung Ho
, Manh-Toan Ho
:
Bridging divides: Empathy-augmenting technologies and cultural soul-searching. 1139-1141 - Deepak P
:
AI safety: necessary, but insufficient and possibly problematic. 1143-1145 - Tim Christiaens
:
Nationalize AI! 1147-1149 - Petr Specián
, Lucy Císar Brown
:
Give the machine a chance, human experts ain't that great... 1155-1156 - Meimei Chen, Bin Hong
:
When will the blind be able to take their first steps with GDR guidance under artificial intelligence? 1157-1159 - Manh-Tung Ho
, Quan-Hoang Vuong
:
Five premises to understand human-computer interactions as AI is changing the world. 1161-1162 - Garima Gupta
:
ChatGPT and digital capitalism: need for an antidote of Competition Law. 1163-1165 - Puneet Sharma
:
Responsible research in artificial intelligence: lessons from the past. 1167-1168 - Halfdan Holm, Soumya Banerjee
:
Intelligence in animals, humans and machines: a heliocentric view of intelligence? 1169-1171 - Arun Teja Polcumpally
, Megha Shrivastava, Shashank S. Patel:
Emerging contours of geopolitics and state in the digital era. 1173-1177 - Peter Mantello, Manh-Tung Ho
:
Correction to: Emotional AI and the future of wellbeing in the post-pandemic workplace. 1179 - Kestutis Mosakas:
Correction: On the moral status of social robots: considering the consciousness criterion. 1181
Volume 40, Number 3, March 2025
- Helene Friis Ratner
, Nanna Bonde Thylstrup
:
Citizens' data afterlives: Practices of dataset inclusion in machine learning for public welfare. 1183-1193 - Leonard Dung
:
The argument for near-term human disempowerment through AI. 1195-1208 - Eike Buhr
, Johannes Welsch
, Muhammad Salman Shaukat
:
Value preference profiles and ethical compliance quantification: a new approach for ethics by design in technology-assisted dementia care. 1209-1225 - Lucas Freund:
The age of the algorithmic society a Girardian analysis of mimesis, rivalry, and identity in the age of artificial intelligence. 1227-1236 - David A. Spencer:
AI, automation and the lightening of work. 1237-1247 - Harry Collins
:
Why artificial intelligence needs sociology of knowledge: parts I and II. 1249-1263 - Marc Heimann
, Anne-Friederike Hübener
:
The extimate core of understanding: absolute metaphors, psychosis and large language models. 1265-1276 - Tim Hinks:
Navigating technological shifts: worker perspectives on AI and emerging technologies impacting well-being. 1277-1287 - Nathaniel Sharadin
:
Morality first? 1289-1301 - Mark Ryan
:
We're only human after all: a critique of human-centred AI. 1303-1319 - Dakota Root
:
Reconfiguring the alterity relation: the role of communication in interactions with social robots and chatbots. 1321-1332 - Pascal D. Koenig
:
Attitudes toward artificial intelligence: combining three theoretical perspectives on technology acceptance. 1333-1345 - Maximilian Braun
, Ruth Müller
:
Missed opportunities for AI governance: lessons from ELS programs in genomics, nanotechnology, and RRI. 1347-1360 - Casey R. Lynch
, Bethany N. Manalo, Àlex Muñoz-Viso
:
Robotics in place and the places of robotics: productive tensions across human geography and human-robot interaction. 1361-1374 - Chiara Carboni
, Rik Wehrens
, Romke van der Veen, Antoinette de Bont
:
Doubt or punish: on algorithmic pre-emption in acute psychiatry. 1375-1387 - Jan Söffner
:
Virtualism: how AI replaces reality. 1389-1401 - Markus Rüther
:
The meaningfulness gap in AI ethics: a guide on how to think through a complex challenge. 1403-1415 - Alexander M. Sidorkin
:
Embracing liberatory alienation:AI will end us, but not in the way you may think. 1417-1424 - Andy Crabtree
, Glenn McGarry
, Lachlan Urquhart
:
AI and the iterable epistopics of risk. 1425-1438 - Tsvetelina Hristova
, Liam Magee
, Karen Soldatic
:
The problem of alignment. 1439-1453 - Zoe Horn, Liam Magee
, Anna Munster
:
Lost in the logistical funhouse: speculative design as synthetic media enterprise. 1455-1468 - Christopher Thomas, Huw Roberts
, Jakob Mökander, Andreas Tsamados, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:
The case for a broader approach to AI assurance: addressing "hidden" harms in the development of artificial intelligence. 1469-1484 - Sebastian Krügel
, Jonas Ammeling, Marc Aubreville, Alexis Fritz, Angelika Kießig, Matthias Uhl
:
Perceived responsibility in AI-supported medicine. 1485-1495 - Jakub Mlynár
, Lynn de Rijk
, Andreas Liesenfeld, Wyke Stommel, Saul Albert
:
AI in situated action: a scoping review of ethnomethodological and conversation analytic studies. 1497-1527 - Abdur R. Shahid, Ahmed Imteaj
:
Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me! - Navigating the cybersecurity risks of generative AI. 1529-1530 - Vincent J. Straub
, Jonathan Bright:
Unite the study of AI in government: With a shared language and typology. 1531-1532 - Akhil P. Joseph
, Anithamol Babu
:
The unseen dilemma of AI in mental healthcare. 1533-1535 - K. Woods
:
If AI is our co-pilot, who is the captain? 1537-1538 - Mark Ressler
:
Hunters not beggars. 1539-1540 - Monalisa Bhattacherjee
, Sweta Sinha:
As you sow, so shall you reap: rethinking humanity in the age of artificial intelligence. 1541-1542 - Binny Jose
, Angel Thomas
:
The illusion of understanding: AI's role in cognitive psychology research. 1543-1544 - Bibin Xavier
:
Biases within AI: challenging the illusion of neutrality. 1545-1546 - Polychronis Koutsakis
, Despoina Giannakaki:
There is no "AI" in "Freedom" or in "God". 1547-1548 - Siva Mathiyazhagan, Desmond Upton Patton:
Towards just and equitable Web3: social work recommendations for inclusive practice of AI policies. 1549-1551 - Helen Smith
:
The pitfalls of probes: are our earthly ethical principles lost in space? 1553-1555 - Christopher A. Mouton
, Caleb Lucas
:
How to identify and address the real-world risks of large language models. 1557-1558 - Tyler L. Jaynes
:
Personhood for artificial intelligence? A cautionary tale from Idaho and Utah. 1559-1561 - Jinqian Li
:
Now you see me, now you don't: why the UK must ban police facial recognition. 1563-1564 - Misha Rabinovich
, Caitlin Foley:
The work of art in the age of AI reproducibility. 1565-1567 - Ashwin Tambe:
Balancing progress and preservation: can AI harmonize efficiency with the human experience in retail? 1569-1570 - Quan-Hoang Vuong
, Manh-Tung Ho
:
The disruptive AlphaGeometry: is it the beginning of the end of mathematics education? 1571-1573 - Ericka Johnson
, Saghi Hajisharif:
The intersectional hallucinations of synthetic data. 1575-1577 - Shuo Wang
, Hiromi M. Yokoyama
:
Fight fire with fire: why not be more tolerant of ChatGPT in academic writing? 1581-1582 - Jan Bröchner
:
Effects of generative AI on service occupations with social interaction. 1583-1584 - Tolga Yalur
:
The cookie dispositif. 1585-1589 - Tyler Cook
:
A qualified defense of top-down approaches in machine ethics. 1591-1605 - P. D. Magnus
:
Generative AI and photographic transparency. 1607-1612 - Lavinia Marin
, Constantin Vica
:
Hic sunt leones. User orientation as a design principle for emerging institutions on social media platforms. 1613-1626 - Kristian D'Amato
:
ChatGPT: towards AI subjectivity. 1627-1641 - Davide Baldini
, Matteo De Benedetto
:
The open texture of 'algorithm' in legal language. 1643-1654 - Raigul Salimova, Jamilya Nurmanbetova, Maira Kozhamzharova, Mira Manassova
, Saltanat Aubakirova
:
Philosophy of education in a changing digital environment: an epistemological scope of the problem. 1655-1666 - Sam Hind
, Fernando N. van der Vlist
, Max Kanderske
:
Challenges as catalysts: how Waymo's Open Dataset Challenges shape AI development. 1667-1683 - Adeniyi Fasoro
:
The ontological quandary of deepfakes. 1685-1693 - Isaac Taylor
:
Is explainable AI responsible AI? 1695-1704 - Rajan
:
Philosophy of technology for the lost age of freedom: a critical treatise on human essence and uncertain future. 1705-1722 - Sadjad Soltanzadeh
:
A metaphysical account of agency for technology governance. 1723-1734 - Stephanie Sheir
, Arianna Manzini
, Helen Smith
, Jonathan Ives
:
Adaptable robots, ethics, and trust: a qualitative and philosophical exploration of the individual experience of trustworthy AI. 1735-1748 - Jens Hälterlein
:
Imagining and governing artificial intelligence: the ordoliberal way - an analysis of the national strategy 'AI made in Germany'. 1749-1760 - Sebastián Lehuedé
:
An elemental ethics for artificial intelligence: water as resistance within AI's value chain. 1761-1774 - Bashar Haruna Gulumbe
, Shuaibu Muhammad Audu, Abubakar Muhammad Hashim:
Balancing AI and academic integrity: what are the positions of academic publishers and universities? 1775-1784 - Samantha Jackson
, Barend Beekhuizen
, Zhao Zhao
, Rhonda McEwen
:
GPT-4-Trinis: assessing GPT-4's communicative competence in the English-speaking majority world. 1785-1801 - Mark Coeckelbergh
:
The case for global governance of AI: arguments, counter-arguments, and challenges ahead. 1803-1806 - Sungjin Park
:
The work of art in the age of generative AI: aura, liberation, and democratization. 1807-1816 - Tamari Gamkrelidze
, Moustafa Zouinar
, Flore Barcellini:
AI at work: understanding its uses and consequences on work activities and organization in radiology. 1817-1835 - Maurice Jones
, Fenwick McKelvey
:
Deconstructing public participation in the governance of facial recognition technologies in Canada. 1837-1850 - Fabio Fossa
:
Artificial intelligence and human autonomy: the case of driving automation. 1851-1862 - Ejercito Mangawa Balay-odao, Dinara Omirzakova, Srinivasa Rao Bolla, Joseph U. Almazan, Jonas Preposi Cruz
:
Health professions students' perceptions of artificial intelligence and its integration to health professions education and healthcare: a thematic analysis. 1863-1873 - Muhammad Farhan Jalil
, Patrick Lynch, Dayang Affizzah Binti Awang Marikan, Abu Hassan Bin Md Isa:
The influential role of artificial intelligence (AI) adoption in digital value creation for small and medium enterprises (SMEs): does technological orientation mediate this relationship? 1875-1896 - John-Stewart Gordon
, David J. Gunkel:
Artificial Intelligence and the future of work. 1897-1903 - Joan Rovira Martorell
, Francisco Tirado
, José Luís Blasco
, Ana Gálvez
:
How does artificial intelligence work in organisations? Algorithmic management, talent and dividuation processes. 1905-1915 - Jose Luis Guerrero Quiñones
:
Using artificial intelligence to enhance patient autonomy in healthcare decision-making. 1917-1926 - Philip Maxwell Thingbø Mlonyeni
:
Personal AI, deception, and the problem of emotional bubbles. 1927-1938 - Sachit Mahajan
:
The Executioner Paradox: understanding self-referential dilemma in computational systems. 1939-1946 - Marek Winkel
:
Controlling the uncontrollable: the public discourse on artificial intelligence between the positions of social and technological determinism. 1947-1959 - Haruo H. Horaguchi
:
Organization philosophy: a study of organizational goodness in the age of human and artificial intelligence collaboration. 1961-1973 - Vahid Nick Pay
:
AI governance: a review of the Oxford handbook of AI governance. 1975-1977 - José-Carlos Mariátegui
:
Book review. 1979-1981 - José-Carlos Mariátegui
:
Cristina Alaimo and Jannis KallinikosData Rules: Reinventing the Market Economy. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 2024, 238 pp. 1983-1986 - Eliaza Mkuna
:
Robots and AI: a new economic era. Edited by Lili Yan Ing and Gene M. Grossman (2022). Published by Routledge, London ISBN: 9781003275534. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003275534 (open access). 1987-1989 - Katerina Koytcheva, Jason Jorgensen, Kimberly Nehls:
Book Review: Mustafa Suleyman and Michael Bhaskar. (2023). The Coming Wave: Technology, Power, and the 21st Century's Greatest Dilemma. New York, New York, U.S.A.: Random House. 352 pages. [New York Times bestseller]. 1991-1992 - Mohammed Alkhabbaz
:
Meredith broussard: More Than a Glitch: Confronting Race, Gender, and Ability Bias in Tech. 1993-1995 - Chan Aristella Lu
:
Wayne Holmes and Kaśka Porayska-Pomsta (Eds.): The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence in Education: Practices, Challenges, and Debates. 1997-1998 - Noel Carroll
:
Correction to: Are we inventing ourselves out of our own usefulness? Striking a balance between creativity and AI. 1999 - Eike Buhr
, Johannes Welsch
, M. Salman Shaukat
:
Correction: Value preference profiles and ethical compliance quantification: a new approach for ethics by design in technology-assisted dementia care. 2001 - Christopher Thomas, Huw Roberts
, Jakob Mökander, Andreas Tsamados, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Luciano Floridi:
Correction: The case for a broader approach to AI assurance: addressing "hidden" harms in the development of artificial intelligence. 2003 - Michael R. Scheessele
:
Correction: The hard limit on human nonanthropocentrism. 2005 - Binny Jose
, Angel Thomas
:
Correction: The illusion of understanding: AI's role in cognitive psychology research. 2007 - Jinqian Li
:
Correction: Now you see me, now you don't: why the UK must ban police facial recognition. 2009

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