Free Webinar, Jan. 25: Practical and Ethical Aspects of Future Artificial Intelligence

As most of us know, artificial intelligence (AI) has taken big steps forward in the past few years, with the advent of Large Language Models (LLM) like ChatGPT. With these programs, you can enter a query in plain language, and get a lengthy response in human-like prose. You can have ChatGPT write a computer program or a whole essay for you (which of course makes it challenging for professors to evaluate essays handed in by their students).

However, the lords of Big Tech are not content. Their goal is to create AI with powers that far surpass human intelligence, and that even mimics human empathy. This raises a number of questions:

Is this technically possible? What will be the consequences if some corporations or nations succeed in owning such powerful systems? Will the computers push us bumbling humans out of the way? Will this be a tool for liberation or for oppression? This new technology coming at us may affect us all in unexpected ways. 

For those who are interested, there will be a 75-minute webinar on Saturday, January 25 which addresses these issues, and offers a perspective by two women who are leaders in the AI field (see bios below). They will explore the ethical and practical aspects of AI of the future, from within a Christian tradition. The webinar is free, but requires pre-registration:

Here are bios of the two speakers:

Joanna Ng is a former IBM-er, pivoted to a start-up founder, focusing on Artificial Intelligence, specialized in Augmented Cognition, by integrating with IoT and Blockchain, in the context of web3, by applying design-thinking methodology. With forty-nine patents granted to her name, Joanna was accredited as an IBM Master Inventor. She held a seven-year tenure as the Head of Research, Director of the Center for Advanced Studies, IBM Canada. She has published over twenty peer-reviewed academic publications and co-authored two computer science books with Springer, The Smart Internet, and The Personal Web. She published a Christianity Today article called “How Artificial Intelligence Is Today’s Tower of Babel” and published her first book on faith and discipleship in October 2022, titled Being Christian 2.0.

Rosalind Picard is founder and director of the Affective Computing Research Group at the MIT Media Laboratory; co-founder of Affectiva, which provides Emotion AI; and co-founder and chief scientist of Empatica, which provides the first FDA-cleared smartwatch to detect seizures. Picard is author of over three hundred peer-reviewed articles spanning AI, affective computing, and medicine. She is known internationally for writing the book, Affective Computing, which helped launch the field by that name, and she is a popular speaker, with a TED talk receiving ~1.9 million views. Picard is a fellow of the IEEE and the AAAC, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. She holds a Bachelors in Electrical Engineering from Georgia Tech and a Masters and Doctorate, each in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, from MIT. Picard leads a team of researchers developing AI/machine learning and analytics to advance basic science as well as to improve human health and well-being, and has served as MIT’s faculty chair of their MindHandHeart well-being initiative.