Big Thinking with Dr. Isabel Pedersen
Networked bodies, AI, and our future digital lives
Will bodies become computer platforms? Disruptive embodied computing technology is being proposed, and it will change how people live in vastly different ways in our evolving post-Internet society. The idea of a thoroughly quantified, remotely monitored networked body is propelling discussions of personal privacy, human agency, creativity, consent, social connection, cultural values, and ethics. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is seeping into all computing paradigms. As a consequence, AI also operates as an ideology, a belief system. This talk raises questions about early-phase embodied technologies and the unintended consequences that may result in the future.
Dr. Isabel Pedersen is Canada Research Chair in Digital Life, Media and Culture and Associate Professor at Ontario Tech University. She is co-editor of Embodied Computing: Wearables, Implantables, Embeddables, Ingestibles, a collection released in spring 2020 by MIT Press. As a humanities researcher, Pedersen explores how technology is invented and adopted; she takes a human-centric approach to understand the impact on life, culture, politics, art, ethics and social practices. She was inducted into The Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists in 2014.
Open Access In The Humanities And Social Sciences In Canada: A Conversation
Over the last decade, open access (OA) has gained support among researchers and policymakers, with increasingly vocal advocacy for free online access to scholarly work. While incorporating open access policies in Canada reflects a rapidly changing...
Federation announces major investments in scholarly books
The Federation is excited to announce a major new investment in Canadian scholarly books, through its flagship Scholarly Book Awards (formally known as the ASPP). Over the next three years, the Federation will invest $800,000 in the publication and...
Federation releases report on the role of HSS disciplines
Dear members of the social science and humanities community, Today the Federation of the Humanities and Social Sciences is proud to release its new report, Think Big: How the social sciences and humanities are building a better Canada. As we continue...