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  1. The relationship between the attitudes of the use of AI and diversity awareness: comparisons between Japan, the US, Germany, and South Korea.Yuko Ikkatai, Yuko Itatsu, Tilman Hartwig, Jooeun Noh, Naohiro Takanashi, Yujin Yaguchi, Kaori Hayashi & Hiromi M. Yokoyama - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-15.
    Recent technological advances have accelerated the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the world. Public concerns over AI in ethical, legal, and social issues (ELSI) may have been enhanced, but their awareness has not been fully examined between countries and cultures. We created four scenarios regarding the use of AI: “voice,” “recruiting,” “face,” and “immigration,” and compared public concerns in Japan, the US, Germany, and the Republic of Korea (hereafter Korea). Additionally, public ELSI concerns in respect of AI were measured (...)
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  • Transforming phenomenological sociology for virtual personalities and virtual worlds.Kazuhiko Shibuya - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-15.
    Are there opportunities to use the plural to express the first person (“I”) of “the same person” in English? It means that the self is an entity that guarantees uniqueness and is at the core of identity. Recently, radical and rapid innovations in AI technologies have made it possible to alter our existential fundamentals. Principally, we are now interacting with “virtual personalities” generated by generative AI. Thus, there is an inevitability to explore the relationship between AI and society, and the (...)
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