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AI & Society, Volume 34
Volume 34, Number 1, March 2019
- Kathleen Richardson:
Rethinking the I-You relation through dialogical philosophy in the Ethics of AI and robotics. 1-2 - Beata Stawarska:
Primacy of I-you connectedness revisited: some implications for AI and robotics. 3-8 - Stefan Trausan-Matu:
Is it possible to grow an I-Thou relation with an artificial agent? A dialogistic perspective. 9-17 - Arie Kizel:
I-Thou dialogical encounters in adolescents' WhatsApp virtual communities. 19-27 - John Shotter:
Why being dialogical must come before being logical: the need for a hermeneutical-dialogical approach to robotic activities. 29-35 - Ana Cristina Zimmermann, W. John Morgan:
E. M. Forster's 'The Machine Stops': humans, technology and dialogue. 37-45 - Alex Guilherme:
AI and education: the importance of teacher and student relations. 47-54 - Alan J. Dix:
I in an other's eye. 55-73 - Kathleen Richardson:
The human relationship in the ethics of robotics: a call to Martin Buber's I and Thou. 75-82 - Oliver Bendel:
The synthetization of human voices. 83-89 - Cathrine Hasse:
The Vitruvian robot. 91-93 - Nicole Dewandre:
Humans as relational selves. 95-98 - Linor Lea Hadar, Oren Ergas:
Cultivating mindfulness through technology in higher education: a Buberian perspective. 99-107 - Rupert Wegerif, Louis Major:
Buber, educational technology, and the expansion of dialogic space. 109-119 - Vikas Baniwal:
Reconsidering Buber, educational technology, and the expansion of dialogic space. 121-127 - John Danaher:
The rise of the robots and the crisis of moral patiency. 129-136 - Tuuli Turja, Teemu Rantanen, Atte Oksanen:
Robot use self-efficacy in healthcare work (RUSH): development and validation of a new measure. 137-143 - Balaji Srinivasan, Kushal Shah:
Towards a unified framework for developing ethical and practical Turing tests. 145-152 - Nika Mahnic:
Encountering bloody others in mined reality. 153-160 - David Morris:
Burning down the house: bitcoin, carbon-capitalism, and the problem of trustless systems. 161-162 - Kathleen Richardson:
S. P. Gill: Tacit engagement: beyond interaction - Springer, 2015. 163
Volume 34, Number 2, June 2019
- Karamjit S. Gill:
From judgment to calculation: the phenomenology of embodied skill - Celebrating memories of Hubert Dreyfus and Joseph Weizenbaum. 165-175 - Bo Göranzon:
Introduction to The Last Dream by Joseph Weizenbaum. 177-194 - Massimo Negrotti:
Hubert Dreyfus, the artificial and the perspective of a doubled philosophy. 195-201 - Peter Brödner:
Coping with Descartes' error in information systems. 203-213 - Mihai Nadin:
Machine intelligence: a chimera. 215-242 - Simon Penny:
Enactive-performative perspectives on cognition and the arts. 243-249 - Steve Torrance, Frank Schumann:
The spur of the moment: what jazz improvisation tells cognitive science. 251-268 - Mark Coeckelbergh:
Skillful coping with and through technologies - Some challenges and avenues for a Dreyfus-inspired philosophy of technology. 269-287 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Anonymity and commitment: how do Kierkegaard and Dreyfus fare in the era of Facebook and "post-truth"? 289-299 - Jeffrey Benjamin White:
Dreyfus on the "Fringe": information processing, intelligent activity, and the future of thinking machines. 301-312 - David Casacuberta, Ariel Guersenzvaig:
Using Dreyfus' legacy to understand justice in algorithm-based processes. 313-319 - Min-Sun Kim:
Robot as the "mechanical other": transcending karmic dilemma. 321-330 - Rafael Capurro:
A long-standing encounter. 331-332 - Nicola Liberati, Shoji Nagataki:
Vulnerability under the gaze of robots: relations among humans and robots. 333-342 - Sjoukje van der Meulen, Max Bruinsma:
Man as 'aggregate of data' - What computers shouldn't do. 343-354 - Cathrine Hasse:
Posthuman learning: AI from novice to expert? 355-364 - Ignacy Sitnicki:
Why AI shall emerge in the one of possible worlds? 365-371 - F. B. A. Harry Collins:
Remembering Bert Dreyfus. 373-376 - Larry Stapleton, Brenda O'Neill, Kieran Cronin, Matthew Kendrick:
Announcing the Professor Cooley archive at Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland: a celebration of the legacy of Mike Cooley. 377-379 - Karamjit S. Gill:
AI & Society: In Memoriam - Swasti Mitter: the radical economist. 381-382 - Simon Penny:
From Bacteria to Bach and Back - Allen Lane, 2017, London 496 pages, ISBN-10: 0241003563. 383-386 - Karamjit S. Gill:
DELINQUENT GENIUS: the strange affair of man and his technology - Mike Cooley, Spokesman 2018, Russell House, Bulwell Lane, Nottingham, NG6 6BT, England, www.spokesmanbooks.com, ISBN: 978-0-851-24878-3. 387-389 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Artifictional intelligence: against humanity's surrender to computers - Harry Collins, 2018, Polity Press, 65 Bridge Street, Cambridge CB2 1UR, UK, IBSN-13: 978-15095-0411-4, IBSN-13-978-1-5095-0412-1 (pb). 391-392
Volume 34, Number 3, September 2019
- Amalia G. Sabiescu, Aldo de Moor, Nemanja Memarovic:
Opening up the culture black box in community technology design. 393-402 - Ammar Halabi, Basile Zimmermann:
Waves and forms: constructing the cultural in design. 403-417 - Heike Winschiers-Theophilus, Tariq Zaman, Colin Stanley:
A classification of cultural engagements in community technology design: introducing a transcultural approach. 419-435 - Lara S. G. Piccolo, Roberto Pereira:
Culture-based artefacts to inform ICT design: foundations and practice. 437-453 - Leena Ventä-Olkkonen, Netta Iivari, Arto Lanamäki:
In sweet harmony or in bitter discord? How cultural values and stakeholder requirements shape and users read an urban computing technology. 455-476 - Caitlin M. Bentley, David Nemer, Sara Vannini:
"When words become unclear": unmasking ICT through visual methodologies in participatory ICT4D. 477-493 - Mauro Sarrica, Tom Denison, Larry Stillman, Tapas Chakraborty, Priordarshine Auvi:
"What do others think?" An emic approach to participatory action research in Bangladesh. 495-508 - Kaori Ishii:
Comparative legal study on privacy and personal data protection for robots equipped with artificial intelligence: looking at functional and technological aspects. 509-533 - Gert Jan Hofstede:
GRASP agents: social first, intelligent later. 535-543 - Patrizia Marti, Eduard B. van der Houwen:
Poetry as a cross-cultural analysis and sensitizing tool in design. 545-558 - Ahmed Al-Rawi:
Facebook and virtual nationhood: social media and the Arab Canadians community. 559-571 - Satyajit Ghosh, A. Goenka, Manish Deo, Debayan Mandal:
Vernacular architecture as an idiom for promoting cultural continuity in South Asia with a special reference to Buddhist monasteries. 573-588 - Ronaldo Cristiano Prati, Elias Said-Hung:
Predicting the ideological orientation during the Spanish 24M elections in Twitter using machine learning. 589-598 - Daniel Memmi:
The relevance for science of Western and Eastern cultures. 599-608 - Jabulani D. Thwala, Patricia M. Sherwood, Stephen D. Edwards:
Description of philophonetics counselling as expressive therapeutic modality for treating depression. 609-614 - Takeshi Ebina, Keita Kinjo:
Consumer confusion from price competition and excessive product attributes under the curse of dimensionality. 615-624 - Csaba Kertész, Markku Turunen:
Exploratory analysis of Sony AIBO users. 625-638 - Deborah G. Johnson, Mario Verdicchio:
AI, agency and responsibility: the VW fraud case and beyond. 639-647 - Antônio Carlos da Rocha Costa:
An agent-oriented account of Piaget's theory of interactional morality. 649-676 - Steve Edwards:
Heart intelligence: heuristic phenomenological investigation into the coherence experience using HeartMath methods. 677-685 - Lionel P. Robert Jr.:
Are automated vehicles safer than manually driven cars? 687-688
Volume 34, Number 4, December 2019
- Andreas Herzig, Emiliano Lorini, David Pearce:
Social Intelligence. 689 - Nathaniel Tkacz:
Guest preface: Streams of consciousness: cognition and intelligent devices. 691-693 - Shuwei Chen, David H. Glass, Mark McCartney:
Two-dimensional opinion dynamics in social networks with conflicting beliefs. 695-704 - Robert W. Clowes:
Screen reading and the creation of new cognitive ecologies. 705-720 - Roland Mühlenbernd:
The change of signaling conventions in social networks. 721-734 - Marcin Milkowski:
Social intelligence: How to integrate research? A mechanistic perspective. 735-744 - Alessandro Ricci, Luca Tummolini, Cristiano Castelfranchi:
Augmented societies with mirror worlds. 745-752 - Javed Ahmed, Serena Villata, Guido Governatori:
Information and friend segregation for online social networks: a user study. 753-766 - Dave de Jonge, Tomas Trescak, Carles Sierra, Simeon Simoff, Ramón López de Mántaras:
Using Game Description Language for mediated dispute resolution. 767-784
- Markus Christen, Mark Alfano, Brian Robinson:
A cross-cultural assessment of the semantic dimensions of intellectual humility. 785-801 - Caroline Bassett:
The computational therapeutic: exploring Weizenbaum's ELIZA as a history of the present. 803-812 - M. Beatrice Fazi:
Can a machine think (anything new)? Automation beyond simulation. 813-824 - Steve Fuller:
The brain as artificial intelligence: prospecting the frontiers of neuroscience. 825-833 - Tony Sampson:
Transitions in human-computer interaction: from data embodiment to experience capitalism. 835-845 - Nick Srnicek:
The eyes of the state: how central banks think. 847-856 - Michael Wheeler:
The reappearing tool: transparency, smart technology, and the extended mind. 857-866 - Tero Karppi, Yvette Granata:
Non-artificial non-intelligence: Amazon's Alexa and the frictions of AI. 867-876
- Matthew J. Cousineau:
Limiting the discourse of computer and robot anthropomorphism in a research group. 877-888 - Vladimír Havlík:
The naturalness of artificial intelligence from the evolutionary perspective. 889-898 - Stephen D. Edwards:
The HeartMath coherence model: implications and challenges for artificial intelligence and robotics. 899-905 - Wolfhart Totschnig:
The problem of superintelligence: political, not technological. 907-920 - Enrico Beltramini:
Evil and roboethics in management studies. 921-929 - Christophe Bruchansky:
Machine learning: A structuralist discipline? 931-938 - Luís Moniz Pereira:
Should I kill or rather not? 939-943 - Tero Karppi:
Tony D. Sampson: The Assemblage Brain. Sense Making in Neuroculture - Minneapolis, London: University of Minnesota Press, 2017. 945-946 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Simon Penny (2018): Making sense: cognition, computing, art and embodiment - MIT Press (23 Jan. 2018), Hardcover, 544 pages, ISBN-10: 0262036754. ISBN-13: 978-0262036757. 947-949
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