Hi Everyone,
Saleema Amershi from Microsoft Research is giving a TUX talk in a couple of
weeks (February 11), and will be visiting the DGP the following day on
Wednesday, February 12. There will be demos from 1pm to 2:45pm and if you
give a demo there will also be a lunch at 12pm in room 5256. I've added her
talk abstract and bio below.
If you're interested in giving a 15 minute demo please sign up here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1coTWWe3xeZ1j0lL8ydtTGJFsBe-jqF7Wgn3…
Thanks,
Blaine
*Toward Responsible AI by Planning to Fail*
The potential for AI technologies to enhance human capabilities and improve
our lives is of little debate; yet, neither is their potential to cause
harm and social disruption. While preventing or minimizing AI biases and
harms is justifiably the subject of intense study in academic, industrial
and even legal communities, an approach centered on acknowledging and
planning for AI-based failures has the potential to shed new light on how
to develop and deploy responsible AI-based systems.
In this talk, I will discuss the sociotechnical nature of several inherent
and unavoidable AI failures and why it is important for the industry to
systematically and proactively identify, assess, and mitigate harms caused
by such failures in our AI-based products and services. I will then present
Microsoft's recently released Guidelines for Human-AI Interaction and how
we've been using them at Microsoft to help teams think through and prepare
for different types of AI failures.
*Bio*
Saleema Amershi <http://research.microsoft.com/~samershi> is a Principal
Researcher at Microsoft Research AI and currently chairs Microsoft's Aether
Working Group on Human-AI Interaction and Collaboration. Aether is
Microsoft’s advisory committee on responsible and ethical AI. Saleema's
research focuses on helping people create effective and responsible AI user
experiences. Her recent work includes leading Microsoft's effort to develop
general Guidelines for Human-AI Interaction <https://aka.ms/aiguidelines>,
a unified and validated set of guidelines to establish a foundation for
human-AI interaction design. Throughout the years, she has developed tools
and methodologies to support practitioners in designing and building
AI-based products and services, including general purpose platforms and
visualizations for data scientists building predictive models, and
application specific techniques for supporting end-users interacting with
AI-systems in their everyday lives.
Saleema holds a PhD in Computer Science & Engineering from the Paul G.
Allen School at the University of Washington. Prior to UW she completed an
MSc in Computer Science and a BSc in Computer Science & Mathematics from
the University of British Columbia.
http://research.microsoft.com/~samershi
FYI
Best Regards,
Ishtiaque
Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Toronto, ON, CA
Ph: +1 647 220 3482
Skype: syed.ishtiaque.ahmed
web: https://www.ishtiaque.net/
My Availability: Google Calendar Link
<https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=ishtiaque.uoft%40gmail.com&c…>
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Phoebe Sengers <sengers(a)cs.cornell.edu>
Date: Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 4:28 AM
Subject: Summer School on Designing Technology for Social Impact
To:
Please spread the news!
Kaiton Williams, Eric Corbett and I are happy to announce we are
organizing the second research Summer School for Designing Technology
for Social Impact, targeted to PhD and PhD-bound students from
ethnically underrepresented minorities.
The idea behind the summer school is that voices imagining what
technology could be and shaping how it emerges are limited, with
underrepresented communities often marginalized in tech discourses.
Researchers and designers from these communities therefore have a
central role to play in articulating social impact and potential for
communities that other technology developers might forget or know
nothing about, creating alternative, innovative visions for what
technology can be in this world. This summer research workshop is
designed to foster a strong cohort of researchers from underrepresented
backgrounds working on topics related to the social impact of
information technology.
Rising seniors and graduate students at any stage from a variety of
disciplines are invited to attend, including - but not restricted to -
informatics, computer science, science and technology studies,
communication, product design, urban and rural studies, and visual arts.
Our goal is to build a cohort of up-and-coming researchers, provide
experience in this research area, and provide research and career
building opportunities. The event will take place June 15-19, 2020 on
the Ithaca Campus of Cornell University. The costs of travel, food,
lodging, and all events will be covered.
Please let students know they can apply directly for our program through
our website, https://impact.infosci.cornell.edu/ The application
deadline is Friday, Feb. 7, 2020. Please feel free to contact me or
cis-diversityprograms(a)cornell.edu with any questions.
Thank you!
Phoebe, Kaiton, and Eric
---
Phoebe Sengers
Associate Professor
Information Science / Science & Technology Studies
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14850
USA
phoebe.sengers(a)cornell.edu
FYI
Best Regards,
Ishtiaque
Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science
University of Toronto, ON, CA
Ph: +1 647 220 3482
Skype: syed.ishtiaque.ahmed
web: https://www.ishtiaque.net/
My Availability: Google Calendar Link
<https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=ishtiaque.uoft%40gmail.com&c…>
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Michaelanne Dye <mmtd(a)umich.edu>
Date: Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 10:28 PM
Subject: Call for Notes ICTD 2020
To: Indrani Medhi Thies <indranim(a)microsoft.com>
-----------------
*Call for Participation - ICTD 2020 Notes*
Hello!
I would like to invite you to submit a Note to The International Conference
on Information Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD) 2020.
With a 4-page limit, Notes are intended to introduce work-in-progress and
also serve as an excellent venue to submit revised papers that may not be
ready for full-paper status.
*Notes are due on March 6, 2020*, and the conference will be held on June
17-20, 2020, in Gayaquil, Ecuador. For more information visit:
https://ictd2020.org/call-for-notes/.
If you have any questions, feel free to email the Notes chairs:
ictd2020notes(a)gmail.com.
Thank you!
Michaelanne and Eduardo
*(Spanish Version Below)*
Hola,
Quisiera invitarte a enviar una Nota a la Conferencia Internacional sobre
Tecnologías de Información y Comunicación para el Desarrollo (ICTD) 2020.
Con un tamaño máximo de cuatro páginas, las Notas buscan presentar trabajos
en progreso, y sirven además como una excelente manera de enviar ponencias
que no estén aún listas para ser consideradas como artículos terminados.
*Las Notas deben ser enviadas a más tardar el 6 de marzo de 2020*, y la
Conferencia tendrá lugar entre el 17 y el 20 de junio de 2020, en
Guayaquil, Ecuador. Para más información, visiten
https://ictd2020.org/call-for-notes/.
Si tienen más preguntas, no duden en escribir a los responsables de las
Notas, ictd2020notes(a)gmail.com.
¡Gracias!
Michaelanne y Eduardo
--
*Michaelanne Dye*
Assistant Professor/Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow
University of Michigan School of Information
*e: *mmtd(a)umich.edu
*w:* michaelannedye.com
*t:* @michaelannedye <http://twitter.com/michaelannedye>