Putting ethical values and principles into practice across your AI project lifecycle

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L-R Smera Jayadeva, Antonella Perini, Dr Ann Borda

Our Liverpool Virtual Seminar Series on Data Intensive Science will continue on Tuesday 12th November at 15:00 GMT. The seminar will be given by Antonella Perini, Dr Ann Borda and Smera Jayadeva of the Alan Turing Institute, who will present “Putting ethical values and principles into practice across your AI project lifecycle.”

Seminars in this series cover R&D outside of the data intensive science CDT’s core research areas and give an insight into cutting edge research in this area. At the end of the talk there will be a Q&A session with the speaker.

About the talk

The artificial intelligence project lifecycle is affected by the intertwined relation between technology and social structures (e.g. the people in the AI project and the environment in which the project team operates). Both elements interact and influence each other. Acknowledging data-driven technologies as both social and technical constructs is important, because it prompts us to recognise that, from the earliest stages of the AI project lifecycle, human choices, interests, and values are integrated into AI project design, model development, and system deployment. In this session, researchers form The Alan Turing Institute will introduce participants to the AI Ethics and Governance in Practice Programme, which provides the tools, training, and support to carry out projects that apply principles of AI ethics and safety to the design, development, and deployment of algorithmic systems. These include sustainability, fairness, technical safety, accountability, explainability, and data stewardship. Attendees will also engage in discussions around the challenges and opportunities for AI innovation, and how to ensure that AI is produced and used ethically, safely, and responsibly.

About the speakers

Smera Jayadeva is a Researcher in Data Justice and Global Ethical Futures under the Public Policy Programme of the Alan Turing Institute. She has supported research and engagement activities for various projects including the Advancing Data Justice in Research and Practice, Equity in Medical Devices with the Department of Health and Social Care, Safe and Effective Use of AI with the Department for Business and Trade, and the AI Ethics and Governance in Practice Programme. She is a co-host of the Turing’s ‘too long; didn’t read’ podcast which aims to demystify developments in technology, data science, and AI for a general audience. Smera has been supporting the growth as a primary organiser of the Data Ethics Group, the Turing’s largest interest group.

Dr Ann Borda is an Ethics Fellow in the Public Policy Programme at The Alan Turing Institute. Prior to joining the Institute, Ann held senior positions in government-funded data-intensive initiatives in Australia and the UK. In the UK, she managed a significant digital collections programme across the Science Museum London and other national museums promoting public understanding of science, society, and medical discovery.  She subsequently worked on a major Research Council co-funded eScience programme at JISC supporting big data tools and national digital services for higher education, such as the former Open Source Software Advisory Service at Oxford and the AHRC-funded Arts and Humanities eScience Centre at Kings College London.

Antonella Maia Perini is a Research Associate in the Public Policy Programme of the Alan Turing Institute. At the Turing, she contributes to the Ethics and Responsible Innovation theme, where she does research on the ethical and social implications of the design and use of AI and data-intensive technologies and collaborates in the co-creation and operationalisation of pioneering approaches to AI ethics, policy, and governance. Within her role, she has done research on equity in AI-enabled medical devices and co-developed a bespoke programme designed to equip the public sector with tools, training, and support for adopting the government’s official public sector guidance on AI ethics and safety.

How to attend

Participation is free, but you need to register to attend this and other webinars in the series. For more information and how to register please follow this link. Once registered, you will receive the Zoom connection details on the morning of the online seminar.

The seminar details

Speaker: Antonella Perini, Dr Ann Borda and Smera Jayadeva (Alan Turing Institute)

Seminar title: “Putting ethical values and principles into practice across your AI project lifecycle”

Date/Time: Tuesday 12th November at 15:00 GMT