<span>Chapters 5, 12, and 18 of this work are available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International open access licence. These parts of the work are free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.<br><br></span><span
Feminist AI: Critical Perspectives on Algorithms, Data, and Intelligent Machines
โ Scribed by Jude Browne (editor), Stephen Cave (editor), Eleanor Drage (editor), Kerry McInerney (editor)
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 432
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Chapters 5, 12, and 18 of this work are available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International open access licence. These parts of the work are free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.
Feminist AI: Critical Perspectives on Algorithms, Data and Intelligent Machines is the first volume to bring together leading feminist thinkers from across the disciplines to explore the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) and related data-driven technologies on human society.
Recent years have seen both an explosion in AI systems and a corresponding rise in important critical analyses of these technologies. Central to these analyses has been feminist scholarship, which calls upon the AI sector to be accountable for designing and deploying AI in ways that further, rather than undermine, the pursuit of social justice.
This book aims to be a touchstone text for AI researchers concerned with the social impact of their systems, as well as theorists, students and educators in the field of gender and technology. It demonstrates the importance of an intersectional understanding of the risks and benefits of AI, approaching feminism as a political project that aims to challenge various interlocking forms of injustice, social inequality and structural relations of power.
Feminist AI showcases the vital contributions of feminist scholarship to thinking about AI, data, and intelligent machines as well as laying the groundwork for future feminist scholarship on AI. It brings together scholars from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds, from computer science, software engineering, and medical sciences to political theory, anthropology, and literature. It provides an entry point for scholars of AI, science and technology into the diversity of feminist approaches to AI, and creates a rich dialogue between scholars and practitioners of AI to examine the powerful congruences and generative tensions between different feminist approaches to new and emerging technologies. It features original and essential works specially selected to span multiple generations of practitioners and scholars.
These contributors are also attuned to conversations at industry-level around the risks and possibilities that frame the drive to adopt AI. This collection reflects the increasingly blurred divide between the academy, industry and corporate research groups and brings interdisciplinary feminist insights together with postcolonial studies, disability theory, and critical race studies to confront ageism, racism, sexism, ableism, and class-based oppressions in AI.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover
Title
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
Contents
Contributor Affiliations
Introduction: Feminist AI
1 Technosymbiosis: Figuring (Out) Our Relations to AI
2 Making Kin with the Machines
3 AI in a Different Voice: Rethinking Computers, Learning, and Gender Difference at MIT in the 1980s
4 Feminism Confronts AI: The Gender Relations of Digitalisation
5 Shuri in the Sea of Dudes: The Cultural Construction of the AI Engineer in Popular Film, 1920โ2020
6 No Humans in the Loop: Killer Robots, Race, and AI
7 Coding Carnal Knowledge' into Carceral Systems: A Feminist Abolitionist Approach to Predictive Policing
8 Techno-Racial Capitalism: A Decolonial Black Feminist Marxist Perspective
9 Feminist Technofutures: Contesting the Ethics and Politics of Sex Robots and AI
10 From ELIZA to Alexa: Automated Care Labour and the Otherwise of Radical Care
11 Of Techno-Ethics and Techno-Affects
12 The False Binary of Reason and Emotion in Data Visualisation
13 Physiognomy in the Age of AI
14 Signs Taken for Wonders: AI, Art, and the Matter of Race
15 The Cruel Optimism of Technological Dreams
16 AI that Matters: A Feminist Approach to the Study of Intelligent Machines
17 Automating Autism
18 Digital Ageism, Algorithmic Bias, and Feminist Critical Theory
19 AI and Structural Injustice: A Feminist Perspective
20 Afrofeminist Data Futures
21 Design Practices:Nothing About Us Without Us'
Index
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