Telling Stories: On Culturally Responsive Artificial Intelligence
What world — what worlds — will we build with artificial intelligence? Intended for policymakers, technologists, educators and others, this international collection of 19 short stories delves into AI’s cultural impacts with hesitation and wonder. Authors from Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, India, Rwanda, Sri Lanka, the United States, and elsewhere vividly recount the anticipated influences of AI on love, time, justice, identity, language, trust, and knowledge through the power of narrative.
Ryan Calo
Batya Friedman
Tadayoshi Kohno
Hannah Almeter
Nick Logler
Projects in Human-Computer Interaction
- Leveraging Collaborative Filtering for Personalized Behavior Modeling: A Case Study on Depression Detection among College Students
- On the Steppe: Plain Talk Imagining Technology Used Wisely
- Using Everyday Routines for Understanding Health Behaviors
- When Screen Time Isn’t Screen Time: Tensions and Needs Between Tweens and Their Parents During Nature-based Exploration
- Falx: Synthesis-Powered Visualization Authoring
- What Makes People Join Conspiracy Communities? Role of Social Factors in Conspiracy Engagement
- Visually Encoding Personal Data for Vulnerable Populations
- Who Are You Asking?: Qualitative Methods for Involving AAC Users as Primary Research Participants
- Where Are My Parents?: Information Needs of Hospitalized Children
- Parenting with Alexa: Exploring the Introduction of Smart Speakers on Family Dynamics
- “Eavesdropping”: An Information Source for Inpatients
- Detecting Depression and Predicting its Onset Using Longitudinal Symptoms Captured by Passive Sensing: A Machine Learning Approach With Robust Feature Selection
- Mobile Assessment of Acute Effects of Marijuana on Cognitive Functioning in Young Adults: Observational Study
- Telling Stories: On Culturally Responsive Artificial Intelligence
- What Makes People Join Conspiracy Communities?: Role of Social Factors in Conspiracy Engagement
- Early adopters of a low vision head-mounted assistive technology
- Being (In)Visible: Privacy, Transparency, and Disclosure in the Self-Management of Bipolar Disorder
- Visualizing Personal Rhythms: A Critical Visual Analysis of Mental Health in Flux