TU Wien DIGHUM

Accepted Papers

The following papers have been accepted for inclusion in the conference proceedings and for presentation at the conference.

  • Privacy Merchants and Data Protection in the Age of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence. Domenico Talia
  • Digital technologies and industrial policy: civilian vs. military trajectories. Dario Guarascio and Mario Pianta
  • Understanding the Humanist Notion of Trust in the Age of Generative AI. Pia-Zoe Hahne and Alexander Schmoelz
  • What if the Avatar Can Read My Mind? Possibilities and Ethical Pitfalls of Human-Virtual Reality Interaction Integrating Artificial Intelligence. Silvia Erika Kober
  • Who Wants to Live Forever? AI-centricity as Ex-centricity of Death. Alexandru Balasescu
  • Inhumane Computation. On the Impossibility of Sustainable Artificial Intelligence. Rainer Rehak
  • Narrated future: How narratives shape our digital present. Betina Aumair and Doris Vickers
  • Thinking along the lines generated by GenAI? A systematic mapping study on academic writing. Éva Kaczkó, Lana Ivanjek, Lisa-Maria Norz and Elske Ammenwerth
  • Breaking Disciplinary Silos: The Case of Software Engineering. Carlo Ghezzi, Masoud Ebrahimi, Damir Isovic and Marjan Sirjani
  • Start Using Justifications When Explaining AI Systems to Decision Subjects. Klára Kolářová and Timothée Schmude
  • Towards Fair AI Systems: An Insurance Case Study to Identify and Mitigate Discrimination. Annabel Resch and Allan Hanbury
  • Paperwork vs. Payperplay. Simon Huber
  • Vulnerability as a Design Ethics for Digital Humanism. Erich Prem
  • Micro-Degree Artificial Intelligence and Society. Jana Lasser and Manfred Pfiffner
  • Between Principle and Practice: Evaluating the EU AI Act through the Lens of Digital Humanism. Matúš Mesarčík and Natália Slosiarová
  • Economies of Labor in the Age of AI: The Case of YouTube. Brian Harper and Hamid Ekbia
  • Beyond the Digital Judge: Legal Reasoning in Compliance Checking and Compliance Choices. Marcello Ceci and Domenico Bianculli
  • Heuristic Search and Constraint Verification for Value-Centric Electrification Planning. William Berglund and Andreas Brännström
  • Readiness-Centered AI in Practice: Findings from a Pilot Chatbot for Digital Skilling of Older Adults in Low-Resource Contexts. Anne Muchiri, Joshua Rumo, Giannis Haralabopoulos, Paula Musuva and Paul Spiesberger
  • Why Digital Humanism Needs a Social Psychology – and How You Can Use Digital Data to Study Social Identities in Socio-Technical Systems. Mark Levine and Anastasia Kordoni
  • A two-axis framework to map reasons for neurotechnology use. Guilherme Maia de Oliveira Wood, Eugen Dolezal, Lisa M. Berger, Petra Zandonella, Thomas Gremsl and Elisabeth Staudegger
  • A Bayesian View of the Result Model. Yoann Morello and Agata Ciabattoni
  • Realizing Ethical-aware Business Processes. Sara Pettinari, Martina De Sanctis and Paola Inverardi
  • Linguistic diversity and digitalization: an ambivalent relationship. Juliane Benson, Katharina Zeh, Hannes Essfors, Hannes Fellner, Julia Neidhardt and Andreas Baumann
  • Adaptive Alignment of Human Values in Cyber-Physical Supply Chains. Thomas Welsh, Diane Hassett, Bashar Nuseibeh and Andrea Zisman
  • Bridging Ethics and Regulation: How VBE Facilitates Compliance with the EU AI Act in High-Risk and General Purpose AI. Lukas Madl, Soner Bargu and Mert Cuhadaroglu
  • On the Digital Literacy pedagogical strategies to curb Disinformation in the Global South(s). Sérgio Barbosa
  • Visual Neuroprosthetics, Digital Humans and the Law of Evidence. Claudia González Márquez and Burkhard Schafer
  • Schedules Need to be Fair Over Time. Marie-Louise Lackner
  • Parliaments in the digital age - a proposal for a theoretical framework. Christoph Konrath and Anna Rathmair
  • AI Research is not Magic, it has to be Reproducible and Responsible: Challenges in the AI field from the Perspective of its PhD Students. Andrea Hrckova, Jennifer Renoux, Rafael Tolosana Calasanz, Daniela Chuda, Martin Tamajka and Jakub Simko
  • Unpacking the Tensions of Empowerment in Digital-Self Tracking: A Digital Humanism Perspective. Anke Schneider and Cornelia Gerdenitsch
  • Reclaiming Agency through Cyber Humanism: A European Agenda for AI, Education and Culture. Giovanni Adorni, Emanuele Bellini and Ilaria Torre
  • Normative Challenges in Europe’s Digital Infrastrucure: A Transdisciplinary Exploration of Smart Meter Data Sharing. Nikolas Zechner, Florian Güldenpfennig and Michael Funk
  • Designing Deliberative Digital Communication Platforms. Kian Schmalenbach and Bastian Brechtelsbauer
  • The Commons Approach: An Agenda to (Re)Open Artificial Intelligence. Katja Mayer, Stefan Skupien and Jochen Knaus
  • Climate Disasters and Risks in Online Expressions in South Africa. Tendai Ganduri
  • Unsustainable imaginaries of data economies: exploring the concept of waste for EU digital policy. Orsolya Gulyas
  • Are they even aware if AI is used? And what do they think that AI should AI be used for? – Insights into the Digital Skills Austria Study 2024. Dimitri Prandner
  • The Architecture of Academic Overproduction: Toward Post-AI Scholarship. Charles Lang, Chris Moffett and Lalitha Vasudevan
  • Internet Inclusion Through Artificial Intelligence. Francis Saa-Dittoh, Anna Bon, André Baart and Gossa Lô
  • A System Prototype for Food Sales Forecasting and Optimization to Reduce Food Waste For Short-Shelf-Life Products. Lukas Grasmann and Nysret Musliu