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AI & Society, Volume 28
Volume 28, Number 1, February 2013
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Editorial: 25th anniversary volume 28.1. 1-5 - Abbe Mowshowitz:
The end of the information frontier. 7-14 - Albert Borgmann:
So who am I really? Personal identity in the age of the Internet. 15-20 - Helena Granström, Bo Göranzon:
Turing's man: a dialogue. 21-25 - Peter Brödner:
Reflective design of technology for human needs. 27-37 - Mihai Nadin:
Antecapere ergo sum: what price knowledge? 39-50 - Paul T. Durbin:
A contrarian view of postmodern society and information technologies. 51-54 - Mark Coeckelbergh:
Pervasion of what? Techno-human ecologies and their ubiquitous spirits. 55-63 - Massimo Negrotti:
Cultural 'demons' as future builders. 65-73 - Lars Mouwitz:
A Poem for an Empty Spot. 75-76 - Daniel Memmi:
Cultural consequences of computing technology. 77-85 - Ajit Narayanan:
Society under threat... but not from AI. 87-94 - Larry Stapleton:
Zarathustra and beyond: exploring culture and values online. 95-105 - Frederick Kile:
Artificial intelligence and society: a furtive transformation. 107-115 - Francesco Garibaldo, Emilio Rebecchi:
Needs and desires: transcending the 'bipolar tendency'. 117-121 - An appreciation - Prof Howard H. Rosenbrock Ph.D., DSc, FRS, FREng 1920-2010. 123-125
- Short biographies of contributors to the AI & Society 25th anniversary volume 28.1. 127-130
Volume 28, Number 2, May 2013
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Citizens and netizens: a contemplation on ubiquitous technology. 131-132 - Sha Xin Wei:
Concerted knowledges and practices: an experiment in autonomous cultural production. 133-145 - Simon Penny:
Art and robotics: sixty years of situated machines. 147-156 - Riccardo Manzotti, Robert Pepperell:
The New Mind: thinking beyond the head. 157-166 - Tania Fraga:
Caracolomobile: affect in computer systems. 167-176 - Lauge Baungaard Rasmussen:
Cultural visions of technology - Paradoxes of panoptic and interactive perspectives and methods. 177-188 - Ismo Kantola:
On the re-materialization of the virtual. 189-198 - David Casacuberta Sevilla:
The quest for artificial wisdom. 199-207 - Michele Rapoport:
Being a body or having one: automated domestic technologies and corporeality. 209-218 - Richard Ennals:
Only connect. 219-225 - Soraj Hongladarom:
Ubiquitous computing, empathy and the self. 227-236 - René Victor Valqui Vidal:
To be human is to be creative. 237-248 - Author brief biography. 249-252
Volume 28, Number 3, August 2013
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Faust, Freud, machine: encounters and performance. 253-255 - Douglas Schuler:
Doctor Faustus in the twenty-first century - A meditation on knowledge, power, and civic intelligence. 257-266 - Simon Bacon:
"We Can Rebuild Him!": The essentialisation of the human/cyborg interface in the twenty-first century, or whatever happened to The Six Million Dollar Man? 267-276 - Toyoaki Nishida:
Toward mutual dependency between empathy and technology. 277-287 - Robert Rosenberger:
The importance of generalized bodily habits for a future world of ubiquitous computing. 289-296 - Franco Scalzone, Guglielmo Tamburrini:
Human-robot interaction and psychoanalysis. 297-307 - Min-Sun Kim, Eun-Joo Kim:
Humanoid robots as "The Cultural Other": are we able to love our creations? 309-318 - Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic:
Cognitive revolution, virtuality and good life. 319-327 - Bernard Blandin, Bernard Lietaer:
Mutual learning: a systemic increase in learning efficiency to prepare for the challenges of the twenty-first century. 329-338 - Adrian Ratkic:
Images of reflection: on the meanings of the word reflection in different learning contexts. 339-349 - Sven Åberg:
Circumvention - On judgement as practical action. 351-359 - Author brief biographies. 361-363
- Book review. 365-366
Volume 28, Number 4, December 2013
- Karamjit S. Gill:
The Internet of things! then what? 367-371 - Mike Cooley:
Preface - Ways of knowing. 373-375 - Tore Nordenstam:
Practical knowledge and ethics. 377-382 - Parthasarathi Banerjee:
Ethical issues in our times of technology: select exploration. 383-388 - Kenichi Uchiyama, Satoshi Suzuki:
Rethinking 'IT/IS use in a technological mature society' from the actuality point of view: critical learning in reflection on SSM meeting about 'IT/IS use'. 389-398 - Steve Torrance:
Artificial agents and the expanding ethical circle. 399-414 - Ian Cross:
"Does not compute"? Music as real-time communicative interaction. 415-430 - Roberto Cordeschi:
Automatic decision-making and reliability in robotic systems: some implications in the case of robot weapons. 431-441 - Stephen J. Cowley:
Naturalizing language: human appraisal and (quasi) technology. 443-453 - Shaun Gallagher:
You and I, robot. 455-460 - Andreas Elpidorou:
The "New Mind" revisited, or minding the content/vehicle distinction: a response to Manzotti and Pepperell. 461-466 - Riccardo Manzotti, Robert Pepperell:
Denying the content-vehicle distinction: a response to 'The New Mind Revisited'. 467-470 - Eunice McCarthy:
The dynamics of culture, innovation and organisational change: a nano-psychology future perspective of the psycho-social and cultural underpinnings of innovation and technology. 471-482 - Karsten Weber:
What is it like to encounter an autonomous artificial agent? 483-489 - Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko:
U-cities reshaping our future: reflections on ubiquitous infrastructure as an enabler of smart urban development. 491-507 - Douglas Walton:
An argumentation model of forensic evidence in fine art attribution. 509-530 - Alan Cottey:
Moral equivalents of greed. 531-539 - Richard Ennals:
Testing Turing: a personal quest. 541-547 - Siddharth Ramakrishnan:
Morphogenesis, morphology and men: pattern formation from embryo to mind - Celebrating Alan Turing's centenary. 549-552 - Yuval Marton:
Cylons, Gaylons and Gay Grammar: - Celebrating Alan Turing's centenary. 553-557 - Zach Blas, Micha Cárdenas:
Imaginary computational systems: queer technologies and transreal aesthetics. 559-566 - Georgina Voss:
'It is a beautiful experiment': queer(y)ing the work of Alan Turing. 567-573 - Brief author profile. 575-580
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