Seminar Series on Meaningful Human-AI Interactions for a Digital Society – #2: Promoting Meaningful Human-AI Interactions: Societal and Legislative Perspectives

05 June 2024 11:30 till 13:00 - Location: TU Delft Building 36, Lipkenszaal (01.150) | Add to my calendar

A Seminar Series on Meaningful Human-AI Interactions for a Digital Society

Event #2: Promoting Meaningful Human-AI Interactions: Societal and Legislative Perspectives


With the increasing creation, use, and implementation of novel AI systems in every aspect of our society, we must ensure that AI complements us by providing meaningful engagement, centering systems on our human values, and implementing such systems with due consideration of society at large. In this series, we will bring together experts from diverse fields such as human-computer interaction (HCI), philosophy, design, and law with policymakers and practitioners in a mixture of single-speaker seminars, multidisciplinary panels, and expert-led workshops to define what it means to have meaningful human-AI interaction; how to design for these interactions in AI systems; and how to promote such interactions through legislation and policy making.

The second event of this series will be June 5th from 11:30am – 1pm and will discuss the role of legislation in promoting meaningful human-AI interaction. Through presentations and discussion with panelists Dr. Merel Noorman (Tilburg University), Dr. Els de Busser (Leiden University), and Dr. Dayana Spagnuelo (TNO), we will discuss: how can legislation support meaningful human AI-interactions? How do we ground AI interactions in the values and needs of public stakeholders? And: How should public bodies interact with AI? The event will be hosted by Drs. Giorgia Pozzi and Sarah Carter (TU Delft).

All experts, policymakers, and practitioners with an interest in human-AI interactions are welcome to attend!

This event is supported by the National Digital Society ProgrammeMondai | House of AI, the TU Delft AI Initiative, Web Information Systems (WIS), and the Digital Ethics Centre.