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  1. Blue collar with tie: a human-centered reformulation of the ironies of automation.Norman Meisinger - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2653-2657.
    When Lisanne Bainbridge wrote about counterintuitive consequences of the increasing human–machine interaction, she concentrated on the resulting issues for system performance, stability, and safety. Now, decades later, however, the automized work environment is substantially more pervasive, sophisticated, and interactive. Current advances in machine learning technologies reshape the value, meaning, and future of the human workforce. While the ‘human factor’ still challenges automation system architects, inconspicuously new ironic settings have evolved that only become distinctly evident from a human-centered perspective. This brief (...)
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  • Artificial intelligence, public control, and supply of a vital commodity like COVID-19 vaccine.Vladimir Tsyganov - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2619-2628.
    The article examines the problem of ensuring the political stability of a democratic social system with a shortage of a vital commodity (like vaccine against COVID-19). In such a system, members of society citizens assess the authorities. Thus, actions by the authorities to increase the supply of this commodity can contribute to citizens' approval and hence political stability. However, this supply is influenced by random factors, the actions of competitors, etc. Therefore, citizens do not have sufficient information about all the (...)
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  • Framing the effects of machine learning on science.Victo J. Silva, Maria Beatriz M. Bonacelli & Carlos A. Pacheco - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-17.
    Studies investigating the relationship between artificial intelligence and science tend to adopt a partial view. There is no broad and holistic view that synthesizes the channels through which this interaction occurs. Our goal is to systematically map the influence of the latest AI techniques on science. We draw on the work of Nathan Rosenberg to develop a taxonomy of the effects of technology on science. The proposed framework comprises four categories of technology effects on science: intellectual, economic, experimental and instrumental. (...)
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  • Strange affair of man with the machine.Karamjit S. Gill - 2020 - AI and Society 35 (4):777-782.
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  • Prediction Promises: Towards a Metaphorology of Artificial Intelligence.Leonie A. Möck - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 9 (2):119-139.
    1. Artificial Intelligence is an ambiguous umbrella term. Until today there is no uniform definition of AI and the term carries several meanings. As exemplary, I will give two definitions of AI tha...
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  • Urban-semantic computer vision: a framework for contextual understanding of people in urban spaces.Anthony Vanky & Ri Le - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (3):1193-1207.
    Increasing computational power and improving deep learning methods have made computer vision technologies pervasively common in urban environments. Their applications in policing, traffic management, and documenting public spaces are increasingly common (Ridgeway 2018, Coifman et al. 1998, Sun et al. 2020). Despite the often-discussed biases in the algorithms' training and unequally borne benefits (Khosla et al. 2012), almost all applications similarly reduce urban experiences to simplistic, reductive, and mechanistic measures. There is a lack of context, depth, and specificity in these (...)
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