STIMULATING COGNITIVE ENGAGEMENT IN HYBRID
DECISION-MAKING
Friction, Reliance and Biases
(First Edition)
STIMULATING COGNITIVE ENGAGEMENT IN HYBRID
DECISION-MAKING
Friction, Reliance and Biases
(First Edition)
Workshop organizers
Chiara Natali (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, Human-AI Interaction)
Brett M. Frischmann (Villanova University, USA, Law, Business and Economics)
Federico Cabitza (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, Human-AI Interaction)
Detailed timetable
The workshop takes place on Tuesday, June 11th from 2pm to 6pm, with a coffee break at 15.30.
The workshop will be structured in two parts and a final discussion. In the first part, the organizers will provide a short introduction on their specific understandings on Human-AI Reliance and Frictional AI, in the form of a traditional frontal lecture with slides. The second part will be constituted by the presentation of workshop abstracts submitted by the participants; a final round-table and wrap-up discussion among the participants and organizers will conclude the work of the workshop about what it means to have a quali-quantitative assessment of human reliance on AI, the promotion of cognitive engagement and bias avoidance, as to build a common understanding of these issues within the framework of Frictional AI for future research within the HHAI community.
INTRODUCTION
14:00-14:10 Welcoming Address + Introduction: Stimulating Cognitive Engagement in Hybrid Decision-Making: Friction, Reliance and Biases.
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/prefaceW1.pdf
14:10-14:20 Brett M. FRISCHMANN, Villanova University - "An Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for Prosocial Friction-in-Design"
14:20-14:30 Chiara NATALI, University of Milan-Bicocca - "Frictional AI: Topics and Issues"
SESSION 1 - HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION AND BIASES
14:45-14:55 Regina DE BRITO DUARTE, INESC-ID, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon - "Looking for cognitive bias in Human-AI decision-making"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/short1-1.pdf
14:55-15:05 Sebastiano MORUZZI, Filippo FERRARI and Filippo RISCICA LIZZO, University of Bologna - "Biases and epistemic filters"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/short1-3.pdf
15:05-15:15 Christopher D. QUINTANA, Georg THEINER, Villanova University - "Make Friends, Not Tools: Designing AI for Technoamicitia"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/extendedAbstract1-2.pdf
15:15-15:30 Scott ROBBINS, University of Bonn - "Beyond Regulation: How We Can Craft a Meaningful Future with AI"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/extendedAbstract1-1.pdf
[15:30-16:00 COFFEE BREAK]
16:00-16:25 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION OF HUMAN-AI COLLABORATION AND BIASES (SESSION 1 PAPERS)
SESSION 2 - FRICTIONAL AI APPLICATIONS
16:25-16:35 Caterina FREGOSI, Federico CABITZA, University of Milan-Bicocca - "A frictional design approach: towards Judicial AI and its possible applications".
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/short1-2.pdf
16:35-16:45 Ingar BRINCK, Samantha STEDTLER and Valentina FANTASIA, Lund University - "Exploring Frictional Design in Human-Robot Interaction: Delayed Movement in a Turn-taking Game"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/short1-4.pdf
16:45-16:55 Sarah INMAN and Sarah D'ANGELO, Google, "Enabling Creative Human-AI Systems with Seamful Design"
16:55-17:10 Evan SELINGER, Rochester Institute of Technology - "Balancing Empathy and Accountability: Exploring Friction-In-Design For AI-Mediated Doctor-Patient Communication"
Available at: https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3825/short1-5.pdf
17:10-17:35 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION OF FRICTIONAL AI APPLICATIONS (SESSION 2 PAPERS)
SESSION 3 - REFLECTION
17:35-17:55 Group Activity: Building a Common Understanding of Frictional AI + Research Agenda
17:55-18:00 Next steps & Info on proceedings
Programme Committee
Submission are evaluated by a multidisciplinary panel of experts.
Noah Apthorpe (Colgate University, USA, Computer Science)
Niels van Berkel (Aalborg University, Denmark, Human-Centred Computing)
Andrea Campagner (IRCCS Galeazzi Sant'Ambrogio Hospital, Italy, Artificial Intelligence)
Marta E. Cecchinato (Northumbria University, UK, Human-Computer Interaction)
Paolo Cherubini (University of Pavia, Italy, Psychology)
Lewis L. Chuang (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany, Neuroscience)
Davide Ciucci (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, Computer Science)
Vincenzo Crupi (University of Turin, Italy, Philosophy)
Diletta Huyskes (University of Milan, Italy, Sociology)
Jo Iacovides (University of York, UK, Human-Computer Interaction)
Sarah Inman (Google, USA, Human-Centered Design)
Tomáš Kliegr (Prague University of Economics, Czechia, Informatics)
Tim Miller (University of Queensland, Australia, Artificial Intelligence)
Mohammad Naiseh (Bournemouth University, UK, Artificial Intelligence)
Enea Parimbelli (University of Pavia, Italy, Engineering)
Sarah Michele Rajtmajer (Pennsylvania State University, USA, Computer Science)
Carlo Reverberi (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, Psychology)
David Ribes (University of Washington, USA, Sociology)
Scott Robbins (University of Bonn, Germany, Ethics of AI)
Evan Selinger (Rochester Institute of Technology, USA, Philosophy)
Yan Shvartzshnaider (York University, Canada, Computer Science)
Alberto Termine (IDSIA USI-SUPSI, Switzerland, Artificial Intelligence)