July 24 - Vienna, Austria

AIofAI: 2nd Workshop on Adverse Impacts and Collateral Effects of Artificial Intelligence Technologies


at the 31st International Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-22)

Accepted Papers

  • Paper 1: Supposedly Fair Classification Systems and Their Impacts
    Mackenzie Jorgensen, Elizabeth Black, Natalia Criado, and Jose Such (King's College London, UK)

  • Paper 2: A Game for Crowdsourcing Adversarial Examples for False Information Detection
    Jan Cegin (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic; Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia), Jakub Simko (Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia), and Peter Brusilovsky (University of Pittsburgh, United States)

  • Paper 3: Utilising Assessment List for Trustworthy AI: Three Areas of Improvement
    Adrian Gavornik, Juraj Podrouzek, Matus Mesarcik, Sara Solarova, Stefan Oresko, and Maria Bielikova (Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia)

  • Paper 4: How to Explain and Justify Almost Any Decision: Potential Pitfalls for Accountability in AI Decision-Making
    Joyce Zhou and Thorsten Joachims (Cornell University, United States)

  • Paper 5: Good AI for Good: How AI Strategies of the Nordic Countries Address the Sustainable Development Goals
    Andreas Theodorou, Juan Carlos Nieves, and Virginia Dignum (Umeå University, Sweden)

  • Paper 6: Towards Enhanced Privacy-Preserving Nudges
    Rim Ben Salem
    (University of Montréal, Canada), Esma Aïmeur (University of Montréal, Canada), and Hicham Hage (Notre Dame University-Louaize, Lebanon)

  • Paper 7: Acquiring Knowledge Using Crowdsourcing and AI: Participatory Budget and Related Risks
    Lukasz Przysucha (Wroclaw University of Economics and Business, Poland)

Workshop Schedule

The event will take place on 24.07.2022 at Gallerie7-8

SESSION I

  • Welcome and Opening Remarks | 09:00 to 09:10

  • Keynote - Collateral ethical effects of using facial recognition in the defense of Ukraine under attack | 09:10 to 09:50

Jean-Gabriel Ganascia

Contributed papers

  • Good AI for Good: How AI Strategies of the Nordic Countries Address the Sustainable Development Goals | 09:50 to 10:15
    Andreas Theodorou, Juan Carlos Nieves, and Virginia Dignum (Umeå University, Sweden)

  • A Game for Crowdsourcing Adversarial Examples for False Information Detection | 10:15 to 10:40
    Jan Cegin (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic; Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia), Jakub Simko (Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia), and Peter Brusilovsky (University of Pittsburgh, United States)

45 minutes BREAK

Contributed papers

  • Utilising Assessment List for Trustworthy AI: Three Areas of Improvement | 11:25 to 11:50
    Adrian Gavornik, Juraj Podrouzek, Matus Mesarcik, Sara Solarova, Stefan Oresko, and Maria Bielikova (Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia)

  • How to Explain and Justify Almost Any Decision: Potential Pitfalls for Accountability in AI Decision-Making | 11:50 to 12:15
    Joyce Zhou and Thorsten Joachims (Cornell University, United States)

LUNCH BREAK

SESSION II

Contributed papers

  • Supposedly Fair Classification Systems and Their Impacts | 14:00 to 14:25
    Mackenzie Jorgensen, Elizabeth Black, Natalia Criado, and Jose Such (King's College London, UK)

  • Towards Enhanced Privacy-Preserving Nudges | 14:25 to 14:50
    Rim Ben Salem (University of Montréal, Canada), Esma Aïmeur (University of Montréal, Canada), and Hicham Hage (Notre Dame University-Louaize, Lebanon)

  • Acquiring Knowledge Using Crowdsourcing and AI: Participatory Budget and Related Risks | 14:50 to 15:15
    Lukasz Przysucha (Wroclaw University of Economics and Business, Poland)

45 minutes BREAK

  • Keynote - Robots that need to mislead: Biologically-inspired machine deception | 16:00 to 16:40

Ronald C. Arkin

  • Closing Remarks | 16:40 to 16:50