How AI works (with humans)

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While robots have long shaped our image of digitization as automation in industry, AI and algorithms have recently come to the fore as information technologies. They combine automation with the control of processes via the collection and analysis of data.
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Today we discuss their application in many digital services and platforms, in decision-making or in managing infrastructures. As a result, we are now vividly discussing how this technology affects our everyday lives and social roles; how they help us improve our skills and complete tasks, but also to what extent they enable us to participate in society or strengthen or impair our rights. These are questions that vitally affect the lives of people in various dimensions.

EDC/HRE has the role to support learners in finding their position toward AI in their concrete digital life (for instance, as employees or users of smart services), in their social environment (for instance, in their city) and also on the system level (data strategies of their country, AI in systemic sectors like police enforcement, jurisdiction, health and social welfare). The network culture chapter elaborated already that each society has uniquely formulated how it uses technology. In this sense, before judging AI, learners need to develop a basic understanding of what AI, deep learning, algorithms and Big Data are and how they work. As such, we suggest some easy and playful entry points to the topic.

When algorithms influence or make decisions, or systems replace human decisions and human agency, it is evident that these technologies need to be embedded in a system of human and democratic governance and control. A challenge that is currently discussed relates to the question of autonomous and unbiased decision - to what extent do these systems replace human labour and intelligence. In the context of debates about social media, the concern arises, that opaque and uncontrollable algorithms might have a negative impact on the information sphere and the democratic public at large. As such, EDC/HRE-related learning is especially focused on the social impact.

“AI is not a technical thing. It’s an existential thing. Technology is immersed in culture, and culture is immersed in technology” (Iaconesi-Persico).

  • What reasons favour the use and deployment of Artificial Intelligence? Economical, demographic, or rights-related ones?
  • What possible benefits or conflicts might arise?
  • What kind of alternatives within these technologies exist and how do these relate to democracy?

Inspiration: Learning about AI and the Internet


Resource: AI for good in Italy

IAQOS, community-based artificial intelligence https://iaqos.online/site/

Funded by the Italian Ministry of Culture, IAQOS is a project aiming to achieve urban regeneration through AI, data and art. The developers, Salvatore Iaconesi and Oriana Persico, introduced an AI infrastructure that was freely accessible and usable by every inhabitant of a highly multicultural neighborhood in Rome (Torpignattara), as it was pre-trained to speak and interpret 54 languages. The core of the project was to describe AI as a new actor in the community rather than as a service. In fact, the knowledge graph was always in plain sight and negotiable. A pedagogical experience was developed in primary school: the pupils described parts of their neighbourhood on the map, and the AI used a Recurrent Neural Network model to discover recurrent patterns in the descriptions so as to produce a narrative about the experience of the territory as seen from the children. The experience has been replicated in Ancona and Bolzano.


Resource: Getting the future right – Artificial intelligence and fundamental rights

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This report published by the European Union Fundamental Rights Agency in 2020, presents concrete examples of how companies and public administrations in the EU are using, or trying to use, AI. It focuses on four core areas – social benefits, predictive policing, health services and targeted advertising. https://doi.org/10.2811/774118

Resource: Globalpolicy.AI

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The portal is a joint effort from the Council of Europe, the European Commission, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the United Nations (UN), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and the World Bank Group. It aims to become a one-stop shop for data, research findings and good practices in AI policy.


handbook for Facilitators: Learning the Digital

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This text was published in: M. Oberosler (ed.), E. Rapetti (ed.), N. Zimmermann (ed.), G. Pirker, I. Carvalho, G. Briz, V. Vivona (2021/22). Learning the Digital. Competendo Handbook for Facilitators.

Created in the frame of the project DIGIT-AL - Digital Transformation Adult Learning for Active Citizenship.

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