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IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, Volume 40
Volume 40, Number 1, March 2021
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Improving, Situating, Expanding. 3-4 - Jeremy Pitt:
Governing in Bad Faith: Suppressing Democracy in Pretense of "Saving Democracy". 5-12 - Sean F. Johnston, A. David Wunsch:
Techno-Fixers: Origins and Implications of Technological Faith. 13-15 - Christina Dunbar-Hester, Jenna P. Carpenter:
Hacking Diversity: The Politics of Inclusion in Open Technology Cultures. 16-18 - Angeles Manjarrés Riesco, Celia Fernández-Aller, Maite López-Sánchez, Juan Antonio Rodríguez-Aguilar, Manuel Sierra-Castañer:
Artificial Intelligence for a Fair, Just, and Equitable World. 19-24 - Elizabeth D. Gibbons:
Toward a More Equal World: The Human Rights Approach to Extending the Benefits of Artificial Intelligence. 25-30 - Angeles Manjarrés Riesco, Simon Pickin, Miguel Ángel Artaso, Elizabeth D. Gibbons:
AI4Eq: For a True Global Village Not for Global Pillage. 31-45 - Celia Fernández-Aller, Arturo Fernández de Velasco, Angeles Manjarrés Riesco, David Pastor-Escuredo, Simon Pickin, Jesús Salgado Criado, Txetxu Ausín:
An Inclusive and Sustainable Artificial Intelligence Strategy for Europe Based on Human Rights. 46-54 - Ulises Cortés, Atia Cortés, Cristian Barrué, Abraham Sánchez, Eduardo Ulises Moya-Sánchez, Dario Garcia-Gasulla:
To Be fAIr or Not to Be: Using AI for the Good of Citizens. 55-70 - Miguel A. Luengo-Oroz, Joseph Bullock, Katherine Hoffmann Pham, Cynthia Sin Nga Lam, Alexandra Sasha Luccioni:
From Artificial Intelligence Bias to Inequality in the Time of COVID-19. 71-79 - Tine Kolenik, Matjaz Gams:
Persuasive Technology for Mental Health: One Step Closer to (Mental Health Care) Equality? 80-86 - Daniel Hernández Marín, Marta Solórzano-García:
SIAMES: Social Impact Advisor and Measurement System. 87-95 - Christine Perakslis:
Champions of AI4Eq: Equity as an Adaptive Challenge. 96
Volume 40, Number 2, June 2021
- Clinton J. Andrews:
If a Colleague Asks: "Will my Innovation Have Unintended Consequences?". 4-5 - Peter R. Lewis, Stephen Marsh, Jeremy Pitt:
AI vs "AI": Synthetic Minds or Speech Acts. 6-13 - Eric P. Wenaas:
Edison - Edmond Morris (Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press, 2018, 800 pp.). 14-16 - A. David Wunsch:
Electric Light: An Architectural History - Sandy Isenstadt (Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press, 2018, 292 pp.). 17-19 - Paul Cuffe:
High Voltages and Low Esthetic Standards: Three Design Principles to Humanize Electricity Pylons. 20-24 - P. Vigneswara Ilavarasan, D. Suzith:
Uber for Electricity: Application of Sharing Economy Model in the Electric Power Sector in India. 25-34 - Johnna Wallace:
Vaccines, Public Health, and the Law. 35-39 - Louise Gordon:
Covid-19 in Conversations. 40 - Shuangge Wen, Mariarosaria Taddeo, Jeremy Pitt:
Some Ethical, Legal, and Social Dimensions of Pandemic Response Technology. 41-46 - Shidong Wang, Hua Sun, Fang Wang, Lynn Robson:
Blended Learning: New Prospects for International Higher Education. 47-53 - Jesús Salgado Criado, Celia Fernández-Aller:
A Wide Human-Rights Approach to Artificial Intelligence Regulation in Europe. 55-65 - Aníbal Monasterio Astobiza, Mario Toboso, Manuel Aparicio, Daniel López:
AI Ethics for Sustainable Development Goals. 66-71 - Xavier Ferrer Aran, Tom van Nuenen, Jose M. Such, Mark Coté, Natalia Criado:
Bias and Discrimination in AI: A Cross-Disciplinary Perspective. 72-80 - Daniel Schiff, Bogdana Rakova, Aladdin Ayesh, Anat Fanti, Michael Lennon:
Explaining the Principles to Practices Gap in AI. 81-94 - Christine Perakslis:
Reflection for a More Equitable World Post-Pandemic. 96
Volume 40, Number 3, September 2021
- Clinton J. Andrews:
How Universal Is Our Message? 4-5 - Jeremy Pitt, Katina Michael, Roba Abbas:
Public Interest Technology, Citizen Assemblies, and Performative Governance. 6-9 - Roba Abbas, Salah Hamdoun, Jumana Abu-Ghazaleh, Netra Chhetri, Nalini Chhetri, Katina Michael:
Co-Designing the Future With Public Interest Technology. 10-15 - Alyssa Henning, Jennifer Vanos, Nathan Downs:
Sun Exposure and Physical Activity: The Valuable Role of UV Wearables. 16-18 - Toby Shulruff:
Not Another Panic Button: Meaningful Inclusion in Technology Development. 19-20 - Jordan Miller, Michael J. Bernstein, Troy McDaniel:
Next Steps for Social Robotics in an Aging World. 21-23 - Bart Moons:
Toward an Open Web (of Things). 24 - Cheng Lin, AJung Moon:
Can Open Source Licenses Help Regulate Lethal Autonomous Weapons? 25-27 - Diandra Prioleau, Priya Dames, Kiana Alikhademi, Juan E. Gilbert:
Autonomous Vehicles in Rural Communities: Is It Feasible? 28-30 - Chris J. Barton:
The Fourth Industrial Revolution Will Not Bring the Future We Want. 31-33 - Jason Lajoie, George Roter, Mark Abbott:
Growing a Culture of Technological Stewardship. 34-36 - Eric Stribling:
How Engineers Think and Implications for Public Interest Technology. 37-41 - Lee Barford:
Material Value Ethics in a Model Process for Values-Based Design. 42-49 - Shreya Chowdhary, Sam Daitzman, Ruby Eisenbud, Emma Pan, Erhardt Graeff:
Care and Liberation in Creating a Student-Led Public Interest Technology Clinic. 50-52 - Francesca Vera:
Considering the Effects of Computer Scientist Stereotypes on Mental Health. 53-59 - Katherine Harrison, Ahmet Börütecene, Jonas Löwgren, Desirée Enlund, Rasmus Ringdahl, Vangelis Angelakis:
Design of Reversible Arithmetic Logic Unit with Built-In Testability. 60-65 - Kristin Bergtora Sandvik:
The Norwegian COVID-19 Tracing App Experiment: Lessons for Governance and Civic Activism. 66-73 - Haowen Fan:
Success in Digital Governance: A Literature Review on Taiwan's COVID-19 Management. 74-79 - Razvan Amironesei, Emily Denton, Umesh Ghanekar:
Notes on Problem Formulation in Machine Learning. 80-83 - Kathleen M. Vogel:
Big Data, AI, Platforms, and the Future of the U.S. Intelligence Workforce: A Research Agenda. 84-92 - Elma Hajric:
AI and Data Rights Considerations for U.S. Policy. 93-98 - Sarah Spiekermann:
What to Expect From IEEE 7000: The First Standard for Building Ethical Systems. 99-100
Volume 40, Number 4, December 2021
- Clinton J. Andrews:
Something in Common. 3-4 - Jeremy Pitt:
Knowing the Unknowable: Soft Laws and Hard Decisions. 5-9 - Carlos Ignacio Gutierrez, Gary E. Marchant, Katina Michael:
Ideas on Optimizing the Future Soft Law Governance of AI. 10-13 - Hillary R. Sutcliffe, Samantha Brown:
Trust and Soft Law for AI. 14-24 - Craig E. Shank:
Credibility of Soft Law for Artificial Intelligence - Planning and Stakeholder Considerations. 25-36 - Daniel W. Linna Jr.:
Evaluating Artificial Intelligence for Legal Services: Can "Soft Law" Lead to Enforceable Standards for Effectiveness? 37-51 - Lucille Nalbach Tournas, Diana M. Bowman:
AI Insurance: Risk Management 2.0. 52-56 - Sara R. Jordan:
Challenges of Artificial Intelligence Review in a Soft Law Environment. 57-67 - Walter G. Johnson, Diana M. Bowman:
A Survey of Instruments and Institutions Available for the Global Governance of Artificial Intelligence. 68-76 - Emile Loza de Siles:
Soft Law for Unbiased and Nondiscriminatory Artificial Intelligence. 77-86 - Neil A. Chilson, Taylor D. Barkley:
The Two Faces of Facial Recognition Technology. 87-100 - Jordan M. Buckwald, Gary E. Marchant:
Improving Soft Law Governance of the Internet of Things. 101-114 - Éric Wenaas:
Corrections to "Edison - Edmund Morris (New York, NY, USA: Random House, 2019, 800 pp.)". 115
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