no |
title |
author |
magazine |
year |
volume |
issue |
page(s) |
type |
1 |
ACESOR: a critical engagement in systems of oppression AI assessment tool
|
McFadden, Zari |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1329-1355 |
article |
2 |
Action-guidance and AI ethics: the case of fair machine learning
|
Sahlgren, Otto |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1019-1031 |
article |
3 |
Addressing corrigibility in near-future AI systems
|
Firt, Erez |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1481-1490 |
article |
4 |
Addressing diversity in hiring procedures: a generative adversarial network approach
|
Marra, Tales |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1381-1405 |
article |
5 |
A global scale comparison of risk aggregation in AI assessment frameworks
|
Schmitz, Anna |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1407-1432 |
article |
6 |
AI ethics in a controversial industry: the case of gambling and its ethical paradox
|
Ghaharian, Kasra |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1685-1701 |
article |
7 |
Algorithm evaluation without autonomy
|
Hill, Scott |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1595-1599 |
article |
8 |
Algorithmic evidence in U.S criminal sentencing
|
Kawamleh, Suzanne |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1315-1328 |
article |
9 |
Aligning artificial intelligence with moral intuitions: an intuitionist approach to the alignment problem
|
Cecchini, Dario |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1523-1533 |
article |
10 |
An approach to sociotechnical transparency of social media algorithms using agent-based modelling
|
Gausen, Anna |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1827-1845 |
article |
11 |
Artificial intelligence (AI) cybersecurity dimensions: a comprehensive framework for understanding adversarial and offensive AI
|
Malatji, Masike |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 883-910 |
article |
12 |
Artificial intelligence at sentencing: when do algorithms perform well enough to replace humans?
|
Ryberg, Jesper |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1009-1018 |
article |
13 |
Artificial intelligence, the common good, and the democratic deficit in AI governance
|
Coeckelbergh, Mark |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1491-1497 |
article |
14 |
A semi-automated software model to support AI ethics compliance assessment of an AI system guided by ethical principles of AI
|
Cappelli, Maria Assunta |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1357-1380 |
article |
15 |
A shift towards oration: teaching philosophy in the age of large language models
|
Lemasters, Ryan |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1203-1215 |
article |
16 |
Assuring AI safety: fallible knowledge and the Gricean maxims
|
Kaas, Marten H. L. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1467-1480 |
article |
17 |
Automated ethical decision, value-ladenness, and the moral prior problem
|
Peterson, Clayton |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1583-1594 |
article |
18 |
Beyond phase-in: assessing impacts on disinformation of the EU Digital Services Act
|
Nannini, Luca |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1241-1269 |
article |
19 |
Biden’s Executive Order on AI: strengths, weaknesses, and possible reform steps
|
Wörsdörfer, Manuel |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1669-1683 |
article |
20 |
Command responsibility in military AI contexts: balancing theory and practicality
|
Oimann, Ann-Katrien |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1757-1767 |
article |
21 |
Conversational hyperconvergence: an onlife evolution model for conversational AI agency
|
Gosmar, Diego |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1147-1161 |
article |
22 |
Correction: Crossing the principle–practice gap in AI ethics with ethical problem-solving
|
Corrêa, Nicholas Kluge |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1289-1290 |
article |
23 |
Crossing the principle–practice gap in AI ethics with ethical problem-solving
|
Corrêa, Nicholas Kluge |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1271-1288 |
article |
24 |
Decisional value scores: A new family of metrics for ethical AI-ML
|
Waters, Gabriella |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1803-1825 |
article |
25 |
Digital ethicswashing: a systematic review and a process-perception-outcome framework
|
Schultz, Mario D. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 805-818 |
article |
26 |
E-coaching systems and social justice: ethical concerns about inequality, coercion, and stigmatization
|
Kamphorst, B. A. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 911-920 |
article |
27 |
Ethical AI governance: mapping a research ecosystem
|
Knight, Simon |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 841-862 |
article |
28 |
Ethical and preventive legal technology
|
Stathis, Georgios |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1069-1086 |
article |
29 |
Ethical considerations for the application of artificial intelligence in pediatric surgery
|
Snyder, Katherine B. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1885-1892 |
article |
30 |
Ethical decision-making in human-automation collaboration: a case study of the nurse rostering problem
|
Bebien, Vincent |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1163-1175 |
article |
31 |
Ethics and the use of generative AI in professional editing
|
Otmar, Renée |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1719-1731 |
article |
32 |
Evaluating approaches for reducing catastrophic risks from AI
|
Dung, Leonard |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1177-1188 |
article |
33 |
Exploiting the margin: How capitalism fuels AI at the expense of minoritized groups
|
Colón Vargas, Nelson |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1871-1876 |
article |
34 |
Exploring ChatGPT and its impact on society
|
Haque, Md. Asraful |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 791-803 |
article |
35 |
Formalizing ethical principles within AI systems: experts’ opinions on why (not) and how to do it
|
Poszler, Franziska |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 937-965 |
article |
36 |
From applied ethics and ethical principles to virtue and narrative in AI practices
|
Hayes, Paul |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1217-1239 |
article |
37 |
From artificial intelligence to semi-creative inorganic intelligence: a blockchain-based bioethical metamorphosis
|
Araújo, Antonio |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1859-1864 |
article |
38 |
From language to algorithm: trans and non-binary identities in research on facial and gender recognition
|
Thieme, Katja |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 991-1008 |
article |
39 |
Geo-political bias in fake news detection AI: the case of affect
|
P., Deepak |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1865-1870 |
article |
40 |
Governing AI through interaction: situated actions as an informal mechanism for AI regulation
|
Papyshev, Gleb |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1109-1120 |
article |
41 |
How can we design autonomous weapon systems?
|
Sancar, Iskender Volkan |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 967-975 |
article |
42 |
How to design an AI ethics board
|
Schuett, Jonas |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 863-881 |
article |
43 |
How to gain control and influence algorithms: contesting AI to find relevant reasons
|
Kuilman, Sietze Kai |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1571-1581 |
article |
44 |
Human control of AI systems: from supervision to teaming
|
Tsamados, Andreas |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1535-1548 |
article |
45 |
‘Hypernudging’: a threat to moral autonomy?
|
Richards, Isabel |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1121-1131 |
article |
46 |
Investigating fairness in machine learning-based audio sentiment analysis
|
Luitel, Sophina |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1099-1108 |
article |
47 |
Manipulating Aggregate Societal values to Bias AI Social Choice Ethics
|
Baum, Seth D |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1615-1627 |
article |
48 |
Measuring adherence to AI ethics: a methodology for assessing adherence to ethical principles in the use case of AI-enabled credit scoring application
|
Pokholkova, Maria |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1291-1313 |
article |
49 |
Metaverse ethics: exploring the social implications of the metaverse
|
Yasuda, Arisa |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1639-1650 |
article |
50 |
On inscription and bias: data, actor network theory, and the social problems of text-to-image AI models
|
Morton, Jorge Luis |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 775-790 |
article |
51 |
Operationalizing responsible AI principles through responsible AI capabilities
|
Akbarighatar, Pouria |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1787-1801 |
article |
52 |
Optimizing fairness and accuracy: a Pareto optimal approach for decision-making
|
Nagpal, Rashmi |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1743-1756 |
article |
53 |
Proposing Central Asian AI ethics principles: a multilevel approach for responsible AI
|
Younas, Ammar |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1629-1637 |
article |
54 |
Prospectives and drawbacks of ChatGPT in healthcare and clinical medicine
|
Alam, Khadija |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 767-773 |
article |
55 |
Reinforcement learning-based motion planning in partially observable environments under ethical constraints
|
Li, Junchao |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1047-1067 |
article |
56 |
Responsibility before freedom: closing the responsibility gaps for autonomous machines
|
MirzaeiGhazi, Shervin |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1601-1613 |
article |
57 |
Robots and reactive attitudes: a defense of the moral and interpersonal status of non-conscious agents
|
Antill, Gregory |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1651-1667 |
article |
58 |
Safeguarding human values: rethinking US law for generative AI’s societal impacts
|
Cheong, Inyoung |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1433-1459 |
article |
59 |
Situating the social issues of image generation models in the model life cycle: a sociotechnical approach
|
Katirai, Amelia |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1769-1786 |
article |
60 |
State of artificial intelligence eco-system in Ethiopia
|
Jima, Wegene Demisie |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 977-990 |
article |
61 |
Sustainable AI and the third wave of AI ethics: a structural turn
|
Bolte, Larissa |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1733-1742 |
article |
62 |
TAI-PRM: trustworthy AI—project risk management framework towards Industry 5.0
|
Vyhmeister, Eduardo |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 819-839 |
article |
63 |
The ethical wisdom of AI developers
|
Griffin, Tricia A. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1087-1097 |
article |
64 |
The ethics of personalised digital duplicates: a minimally viable permissibility principle
|
Danaher, John |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1703-1718 |
article |
65 |
The ethics of using artificial intelligence in scientific research: new guidance needed for a new tool
|
Resnik, David B. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1499-1521 |
article |
66 |
The moral decision machine: a challenge for artificial moral agency based on moral deference
|
Gudmunsen, Zacharus |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1033-1045 |
article |
67 |
The obscure politics of artificial intelligence: a Marxian socio-technical critique of the AI alignment problem thesis
|
Cugurullo, Federico |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1189-1201 |
article |
68 |
The problem of fairness in tools for algorithmic fairness
|
Sun, Xiao-yu |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1847-1857 |
article |
69 |
The prospects of using AI in euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide: a legal exploration
|
van Kolfschooten, Hannah |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1461-1466 |
article |
70 |
The rise of artificial intelligence in libraries: the ethical and equitable methodologies, and prospects for empowering library users
|
Hodonu-Wusu, James Oluwaseyi |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 755-765 |
article |
71 |
Unveiling and mitigating bias in ride-hailing pricing for equitable policy making
|
Saxena, Nripsuta Ani |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1549-1560 |
article |
72 |
Unveiling the ethical positions of conversational AIs: a study on OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard
|
McGrath, Quintin P. |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 921-936 |
article |
73 |
Using ChatGPT-3 as a writing tool: an educational assistant or a moral hazard? Current ChatGPT-3 media representations compared to Plato’s critical stance on writing in Phaedrus
|
Loos, Eugène |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1133-1146 |
article |
74 |
Using the classic trolley problem to teach AI students and researchers about their role as moral agents, and why they should be subject to moral scrutiny
|
Young, Garry |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1877-1883 |
article |
75 |
What does it mean to be good? The normative and metaethical problem with ‘AI for good’
|
Stenson, Tom |
|
|
5 |
2 |
p. 1561-1570 |
article |