Descripción del título

This open access book contributes to the discourse of Responsible Artificial Intelligence (AI) from an African perspective. It is a unique collection that brings together prominent AI scholars to discuss AI ethics from theoretical and practical African perspectives and makes a case for African values, interests, expectations and principles to underpin the design, development and deployment (DDD) of AI in Africa. The book is a first in that it pays attention to the socio-cultural contexts of Responsible AI that is sensitive to African cultures and societies. It makes an important contribution to the global AI ethics discourse that often neglects AI narratives from Africa despite growing evidence of DDD in many domains. Nine original contributions provide useful insights to advance the understanding and implementation of Responsible AI in Africa, including discussions on epistemic injustice of global AI ethics, opportunities and challenges, an examination of AI co-bots and chatbots in an African work space, gender and AI, a consideration of African philosophies such as Ubuntu in the application of AI, African AI policy, and a look towards a future of Responsible AI in Africa. Damian Okaibedi Eke is Research Fellow at the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility (CCSR) at De Montfort University, UK. Dr Eke is the Data Governance coordinator for the EU Human Brain Project. His research interests cover critical philosophical issues at the intersection of Technology, Data and Society including; Data Governance, Ethics of Emerging Technologies, Responsible Innovation and ICT4D. Dr. Kutoma Wakunuma is Associate Professor in Information Systems at De Montfort University within the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility. Her research interests cover social and ethical implications of current and emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence in the developed and developing world. She is also European Commission Independent Ethics Expert. Dr. Simisola Akintoye is a Senior Lecturer in Law at De Montfort University Centre for Law, Justice and Society. She is an International Privacy Practitioner, Data Protection Consultant and the Data Protection Officer for the EU Human Brain Project. Her research involves legal regulation of emerging technologies at national and international levels
Monografía
monografia Rebiun32488469 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun32488469 cr nn 008mamaa 221223s2023 sz | s |||| 0|eng d 9783031082153 UR0545390 UPVA 998271635603706 UAM 991008207751304211 CBUC 991009720256406719 CBUC 991005169365906711 CBUC 991003618640606714 CBUC 991004133149606713 CBUC 991010749733806709 CBUC 991000837223106712 CBUC 991013273000606708 UCAR 991008318567404213 CBUC 991010749733806709 UPM 991006209339904212 303.483 23 Responsible AI in Africa Recurso electrónico] Challenges and Opportunities edited by Damian Okaibedi Eke, Kutoma Wakunuma, Simisola Akintoye 1st ed. 2023 Cham Springer International Publishing Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan 2023 Cham Cham Springer International Publishing Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan XXI, 216 páginas 11 ilustraciones, 9 ilustraciones (color) XXI, 216 páginas Texto txt rdacontent computadora c rdamedia. recurso en línea cr rdacarrier. Springer open access eBooks Social and Cultural Studies of Robots and AI 2523-8531 1. Introducing Responsible AI in Africa -- 2. Epistemic Just and Dynamic AI Ethics in Africa -- 3. Responsible AI in Africa - Challenges and Opportunities -- 4. Working with robots as colleagues: Kenyan perspectives of ethical concerns on possible integration of co-bots in workplaces -- 5. Artificial Intelligence in Africa: Emerging Challenges -- 6. The Use of Gendered Chatbots in Nigeria: Critical Perspectives -- 7. AI Policy as a Response to AI Ethics? Addressing ethical issues in the development of AI policies in North Africa -- 8. Towards Shaping the Future of Responsible AI in Africa This open access book contributes to the discourse of Responsible Artificial Intelligence (AI) from an African perspective. It is a unique collection that brings together prominent AI scholars to discuss AI ethics from theoretical and practical African perspectives and makes a case for African values, interests, expectations and principles to underpin the design, development and deployment (DDD) of AI in Africa. The book is a first in that it pays attention to the socio-cultural contexts of Responsible AI that is sensitive to African cultures and societies. It makes an important contribution to the global AI ethics discourse that often neglects AI narratives from Africa despite growing evidence of DDD in many domains. Nine original contributions provide useful insights to advance the understanding and implementation of Responsible AI in Africa, including discussions on epistemic injustice of global AI ethics, opportunities and challenges, an examination of AI co-bots and chatbots in an African work space, gender and AI, a consideration of African philosophies such as Ubuntu in the application of AI, African AI policy, and a look towards a future of Responsible AI in Africa. Damian Okaibedi Eke is Research Fellow at the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility (CCSR) at De Montfort University, UK. Dr Eke is the Data Governance coordinator for the EU Human Brain Project. His research interests cover critical philosophical issues at the intersection of Technology, Data and Society including; Data Governance, Ethics of Emerging Technologies, Responsible Innovation and ICT4D. Dr. Kutoma Wakunuma is Associate Professor in Information Systems at De Montfort University within the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility. Her research interests cover social and ethical implications of current and emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence in the developed and developing world. She is also European Commission Independent Ethics Expert. Dr. Simisola Akintoye is a Senior Lecturer in Law at De Montfort University Centre for Law, Justice and Society. She is an International Privacy Practitioner, Data Protection Consultant and the Data Protection Officer for the EU Human Brain Project. Her research involves legal regulation of emerging technologies at national and international levels Forma de acceso: World Wide Web Eke, Damian Okaibedi editor Wakunuma, Kutoma editor Akintoye, Simisola editor SpringerLink (Online service)