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