Call for Abstracts – Implementing Machine Ethics

The contemplation of intelligence and/or agency among machines, in popular
discourse, seems to settle on a future technological dystopia or
conversely, a machine-led utopia. While the media creates these dichotomous
futures, there needs to be deeper discussion on how intelligence,
agency, and ethics in machines will affect society. Is the expectation of
ethical behaviour an all-or-nothing proposition? What are the legal
consequences of unethical behaviour by a machine-
augmented human being? Does it make sense to talk about ethically-limited
machines? Do a
machine’s ethical duties towards humanity supersede individual human
rights? The School of
Computer Science, UCD would like to invite submissions for abstracts, for a
Workshop on
Implementing Machine Ethics. Participation is welcome from junior
researchers and senior
academics, who have an interest in the technological, political, social,
legal and philosophical
implications of concrete implementations of ethics in machines. The
Workshop deliberately avoids discipline-specific tracks to allow
researchers from multiple disciplines to interact and exchange views. We
invite submissions for a 20-minute presentation, followed by 10-minute
discussion.
Abstracts are invited on, but not limited to, the following themes /
questions:
* Are ethics expressible in algorithmic form?
* Who is responsible for ethical violations by a machine?
* Can ethical behaviour be guaranteed or verified in computational media?
* Relationships between humans and machines in the presence of hybrid
actions
* Social implications of trust, and dependence on cognitive assemblages
* Can ethical responsibility be assigned when decision-making is
distributed?
* Do ethically-capable machines have rights? Where do these rights stand in
relation to
human rights?

The main thrust of the workshop will be on bringing multiple perspectives
to bear on an acceptable description of ethical machines. Hence, talks that
are provocative or raise pertinent questions are welcome. The first part of
the workshop will consist of presentations, while the latter part will be
devoted to synthesising a joint multi-faceted notion of ethical machines
around the themes and questions listed above.

Abstracts must be approximately 1000 words in length, not including
references, submitted in MS-Word or PDF format. Abstracts must be submitted
to the email listed below, on or before 12-May-2019.

Deadline for abstract submission:  12-May-2019

Confirmed keynote: Prof. Alan Winfield, Bristol Robotics Lab, University of
West of England
Location: School of Computer Science, University College Dublin
Date of Workshop: 2-3 July, 2019
Email contact: machine.ethics....@gmail.com
Website: https://aristotle.ucd.ie/


-- 
Dr. Vivek Nallur
Assistant Professor
Phone +353 (1)716 2475
Computer Science, Room B2.03
University College Dublin
Belfield, Dublin - 4,
Ireland
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