Fr. 235.00

Communicating Artificial Intelligence (Ai) - Theory, Research, and Practice

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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Despite increasing scholarly attention to artificial intelligence (AI), studies at the intersection of AI and communication remain ripe for exploration, including investigations of the social, political, cultural, and ethical aspects of machine intelligence, interactions among agents, and social artifacts. This book tackles these unexplored research areas with special emphasis on conditions, components, and consequences of cognitive, attitudinal, affective, and behavioural dimensions toward communication and AI. In doing so, this book epitomizes communication, journalism and media scholarship on AI and its social, political, cultural, and ethical perspectives.
Topics vary widely from interactions between humans and robots through news representation of AI and AI-based news credibility to privacy and value toward AI in the public sphere. Contributors from such countries as Brazil, Netherland, South Korea, Spain, and United States discuss important issues and challenges in AI and communication studies. The collection of chapters in the book considers implications for not only theoretical and methodological approaches, but policymakers and practitioners alike.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Communication Studies.

List of contents

Communicating Artificial Intelligence (AI): Theory, Research, and Practice
Seungahn Nah, Jasmine McNealy, Jang Hyun Kim and Jungseock Joo
1. Artificial Intelligence in the Dutch Press: An Analysis of Topics and Trends
Maurice Vergeer
2. I-It, I-Thou, I-Robot: The Perceived Humanness of AI in Human-Machine Communication
David Westermann, Autumn P. Edwards, Chad Edwards, Zhenyang Luo and Patric R. Spence
3. A Bot and a Smile: Interpersonal Impressions of Chatbots and Humans Using Emoji in Computer-mediated Communication
Austin Beattie, Autumn P. Edwards and Chad Edwards
4. Predicting AI News Credibility: Communicative or Social Capital or Both?
Sangwon Lee, Seungahn Nah, Deborah S. Chung and Junghwan Kim
5. Privacy, Values and Machines: Predicting Opposition to Artificial Intelligence
Josep Lobera, Carlos J. Fernández Rodríguez and Cristóbal Torres-Albero
6. Making up Audience: Media Bots and the Falsification of the Public Sphere
Rose Marie Santini, Debora Salles, Giulia Tucci, Fernando Ferreira and Felipe Grael

Summary

This book tackles the hirtherto unexplored research areas with special emphasis on conditions, components, and consequences of cognitive, attitudinal, affective, and behavioural dimensions toward communication and AI.

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