**Deadline extension until Jan 19th**
**Submitted papers will also be considered for a special issue of AI
and Society **
AISB 2009 6-7th April 2009
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Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, Scotland
Symposium: Killer robots or friendly fridges: the social
understanding of Artificial Intelligence
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http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/~ruth/krff.html
Call for papers
OVERVIEW
For the non-specialist, the whole notion of Artificial Intelligence
challenges fundamental understandings of what it is to be human, with
enormous implications for how we conceive ourselves, our artefacts
and our societies. AI’s foundational goal was the construction of
autonomous sentience. Yet, 55 years after Turing’s seminal paper,
publicly visible achievements, beyond science fiction speculations or
media exaggerations, still lie in faltering steps in voice and image
recognition, surveillance, computer games and virtual environments,
not in truly intelligent everyday machines.
This symposium will offer a major forum for the discussion of the
social understanding of Artificial Intelligence, in particular the
curious spaces between popular expectations of machines that meet our
every whim, fears of humans enslaved or eliminated by crazed super-
brains, and the sober reality of toasters that still burn the bread.
At the start of the 21st century, it is timely to reflect not just on
the technical achievements and pitfalls of the now mature discipline
of Artificial Intelligence, but also on its wider social
understanding. While there have always been ill informed concerns
about “robots taking over the world”, the reality is both more
prosaic and more complex. People have long anthropomorphised complex
artefacts which are capable of seemingly autonomous interaction.
However, recent advances in the deployment of believable characters
and affective systems, both in graphical and robotic form, have
rekindled problematic social and ethical questions about our
relationships with machines.
This symposium offers a fresh opportunity for interdisciplinary
perspectives on the social understanding of Artificial Intelligence,
with the strong potential to bring together contemporary research in
key technical, social, psychological and philosophical domains
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE:
- AI, Ethics and privacy
- AI and Public Policy
- Portrayal of AI in film, novel and other art forms
- Anthropomorphism and AI
- Attitudes towards robots and graphical characters
- Believability, naturalism and the uncanny valley
- Definitions of human-ness and AI artefacts
- AI and gender
- Social impact of AI
- Social expectations of AI
- Social perceptions of AI
- Social/legal/economic status of AIs
- Social/ethical implications of AI augmentation of humans
- Human/AI construct co-working
- If AIs could talk, would we understand them?
- What is it like to be an AI?
SUBMISSIONS
**Submitted papers will also be considered for a special issue of AI
and Society **
We are seeking submissions of original papers that fit well with the
symposium theme and topics. Papers should be no more than 6 pages in
length in the AISB convention format (available at http://
www.aisb.org.uk/convention/aisb08/download.html).
Papers should be submitted in .pdf format to the Easychair site at:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=krff09
by the submission deadline given below. At least one author of each
accepted paper will be required to register and attend the symposium
to present their work.
All papers from the AISB convention will be published in the AISB
proceedings, with an ISBN number. Authors of papers must sign a
copyright declaration (to follow). However, this declaration is not
exclusive - it gives AISB the right to publish the paper, but does
not prevent the author from publishing it in other venues.
IMPORTANT DATES
**19th January 2009** : EXTENDED Submission deadline
2nd February 2009: Deadline for notifications sent to authors
23rd February 2009 : Camera read copies due
8-9 April 2009: Symposium
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Alison Adams, University of Salford
Ruth Aylett, Heriot-Watt University (co-chair)
Alan Bundy, University of Edinburgh
Bob Colomb, University of Technology, Malaysia
Roddy Cowie, Queens University Belfast
Ylva Fernaeus, Swedish Institute of Computer Science
Rudi Lutz, University of Sussex
Greg Michaelson, Heriot-Watt University (co-chair)
Margit Pohl, Vienna University of Technology
Noel Sharkey, University of Sheffield
Peter Wallis, University of Sheffield
CONTACT DETAILS
Prof Greg Michaelson/Prof Ruth Aylett
Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University, Riccarton, EH14 4AS
[log in to unmask]@macs.hw.ac.uk
0131 451 3422/4189 (phone)
0131 451 3732 (FAX)
--
Ruth Aylett Professor of Computer
Science
Mathematics and Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University
Edinburgh EH14 4AS, UK Tel: 44-131-451-4189 Fax:
44-131-451-3327
http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/~ruth/ "Life is beautiful"
--
Ruth Aylett Professor of Computer
Science
Mathematics and Computer Science, Heriot-Watt University
Edinburgh EH14 4AS, UK Tel: 44-131-451-4189 Fax:
44-131-451-3327
http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/~ruth/ "Life is beautiful"
--
Heriot-Watt University is a Scottish charity
registered under charity number SC000278.
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