Artificial Intelligence and You: The Social and Human Dimensions of AI

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On March 27, 2024

Dr. Joy Lisi Rankin. Photo Credit: Joy Rankin.

Dr. Joy Lisi Rankin. Photo Credit: Joy Rankin.

Please Join the Center for Science, Technology, and Society for a seminar on Thursday, April 25th, at 5:30 P.M.
Location: Innovation Lab, Forum Room
Keynote Speaker: Dr. Joy Lisi Rankin, Knitting, Not Chess: Different Pasts and Futures for AI


Seminar Abstract:
In the latter half of the 20th century, teaching a computer to play chess became a primary focus of those working in artificial intelligence (AI). This emphasis on chess had long repercussions for the development and direction of AI. Likewise, understanding the broader history of chess, especially in terms of gender, provides insight into the gendered history of computing. I open my keynote with this history of AI, chess, and gender before I shift gears to knitting. I show how the history of computing is a history of textiles. After a brief overview of the highly algorithmic and complex nature of knitting, I’ll elaborate on this computing-textiles connection via histories of the Jacquard loom, Herman Hollerith, U.S. Census Workers, IBM, Social Security, keypunch operators, and Apollo core memory weavers (among other examples). Weaving these threads into the history of AI means considering the work of women, especially Black, Latina, and Navajo women. I’ll conclude with reflections on what it means to center women in the pasts and futures of AI and the dangers of failing to do so.

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On March 27, 2024. Posted in Student Announcements, Student News