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Event
Public event
#Tech, Media, Telecom

Towards Human-Centric AI

5 December 2023
14:15
- 15:30

Sparks Meeting, Rue Ravenstein 60, Brussels

About
Programme
Speakers
Event materials
Media
Registration

About

As policymakers work towards rules for the development and deployment of AI systems that are already involved in many aspects of our everyday lives, the way in which humans can interact with and interpret their decisions remains one of the key questions of AI governance.

As the EU strives for a trustworthy and human-centric AI framework, human oversight over AI systems emerges as a crucial element. How can we have effective controls over these systems? What kind of measures need to be in place for the different applications based on their risk levels? Can we challenge their decisions and what would that entail in terms of the explainability of the systems and their outputs?

Join us on 5 December from 2:15PM to 3:30PM CET, in Brussels or online, for a stimulating discussion with representatives from the European institutions, national regulators, and industry and civil society representatives on how human-centric AI can be fostered and what the EU AI Act can contribute to this aim.

Before the panel discussion, CERRE Research Fellow Winston Maxwell and University of Namur Professor Bruno Dumas will set the scene with a presentation of their recently published report ‘Meaningful XAI Based on User-Centric Design Methodology’ that takes stock of the different requirements of transparent and understandable algorithms present in current and upcoming EU legislation and explores what a ‘meaningful’ explainable AI might look like in different scenarios.

This event is free and open to all, but registration is required. Viewers will have the chance to submit questions for the panellists during the event.

If you cannot join us live, then the event will be available to replay on the CERRE YouTube channel afterwards.

Programme

14:15
14:30

Welcome words

14:20
14:30

Academic Presentation

14:30
16:00

Panel Discussion and Q&A

Speakers

MicrosoftTeams Image (32)
Alberto Pena
Head of “Algorithmic Transparency” unit (aka ECAT)
Joint Research Centre of the European Commission.

In the 1980s, he immersed himself in IT engineering in Valladolid, Spain, marking the genesis of a career spanning over three decades. The digital landscape has undergone a seismic shift since those early days, witnessing the transformation of start-ups into BigTech entities, the survival struggles of traditional hardware, and the recent ascendancy of Artificial Intelligence—tracing its roots back to Alan Turing’s groundbreaking paper in 1950.

With 34 years navigating the intricate terrain of ICT in Spain and Belgium, a substantial portion at the European Commission, he arrived during the tenure of Jacques Delors. Over the years, he has served under seven different European Commission presidents, each shaping the trajectory of his work. Described by his son as the one who facilitates tablet play, and by others as the human side of ICT, he acknowledges our existence in a digital world while recognizing our fundamentally analogue nature.

Following academic pursuits at the London Business School and Harvard Kennedy School, he now leads the “Algorithmic Transparency” unit (aka ECAT) at the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission. This unit focuses on the scientific aspects of A.I. and algorithm transparency, providing support for crucial EU legislation such as the DSA and the forthcoming AI act. Personal details take a backseat during working hours, but one notable aside includes a brief radio stint in Brussels at Radio SI, 109.1 FM. Outside of work, he finds joy in globetrotting, music, photography, basketball, animated cartoons, and cherishing moments with his beloved family.

 

 

In the 1980s, he immersed himself in IT engineering in Valladolid, Spain, marking the genesis of a career spanning over three decades. The digital landscape has undergone a seismic shift since those early days, witnessing the transformation of start-ups into BigTech entities, the survival struggles of traditional hardware, and the recent ascendancy of Artificial Intelligence—tracing its roots back to Alan Turing’s groundbreaking paper in 1950.

With 34 years navigating the intricate terrain of ICT in Spain and Belgium, a substantial portion at the European Commission, he arrived during the tenure of Jacques Delors. Over the years, he has served under seven different European Commission presidents, each shaping the trajectory of his work. Described by his son as the one who facilitates tablet play, and by others as the human side of ICT, he acknowledges our existence in a digital world while recognizing our fundamentally analogue nature.

Following academic pursuits at the London Business School and Harvard Kennedy School, he now leads the “Algorithmic Transparency” unit (aka ECAT) at the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission. This unit focuses on the scientific aspects of A.I. and algorithm transparency, providing support for crucial EU legislation such as the DSA and the forthcoming AI act. Personal details take a backseat during working hours, but one notable aside includes a brief radio stint in Brussels at Radio SI, 109.1 FM. Outside of work, he finds joy in globetrotting, music, photography, basketball, animated cartoons, and cherishing moments with his beloved family.

 

 

Jeremy Rollinson
Jeremy Rollison
Senior Director of EU Government Affairs
Microsoft
Katarzyna Szymielewicz
Katarzyna Szymielewicz
Co-founder and President
The Panoptykon Foundation

Katarzyna Szymielewicz is a lawyer, activist, publicist. Co-founder and President of the Panoptykon Foundation, the only NGO in Poland tackling the problems related to human rights and new technologies.

Vice-president of European Digital Rights in 2012-2020. Since 2019 the hostess of Panoptykon 4.0 podcast.

 

Katarzyna Szymielewicz is a lawyer, activist, publicist. Co-founder and President of the Panoptykon Foundation, the only NGO in Poland tackling the problems related to human rights and new technologies.

Vice-president of European Digital Rights in 2012-2020. Since 2019 the hostess of Panoptykon 4.0 podcast.

 

Bruno Dumas
Bruno Dumas
Professor
Namur Digital Institute (NADI), University of Namur.

Bruno Dumas obtained his PhD in computer science in 2010 at the University of Fribourg, in Switzerland. His thesis focused on the creation of multimodal interfaces, along three axes: software architectures for multimodal interfaces, multimodal interaction modelling, and multimodal fusion algorithms. He then worked for four years as a post-doc researcher at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, In Belgium, where he deepened his knowledge of cross-media interactive systems. He is now a professor at the University of Namur, where he leads the EXUI research group, and is the co-president of the NADI research institute. His main research domains revolve around human-computer interaction, multimodal interfaces, augmented/mixed reality as well as how the evolution of IT impacts users in their daily life and our society.

Bruno Dumas obtained his PhD in computer science in 2010 at the University of Fribourg, in Switzerland. His thesis focused on the creation of multimodal interfaces, along three axes: software architectures for multimodal interfaces, multimodal interaction modelling, and multimodal fusion algorithms. He then worked for four years as a post-doc researcher at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, In Belgium, where he deepened his knowledge of cross-media interactive systems. He is now a professor at the University of Namur, where he leads the EXUI research group, and is the co-president of the NADI research institute. His main research domains revolve around human-computer interaction, multimodal interfaces, augmented/mixed reality as well as how the evolution of IT impacts users in their daily life and our society.

Winston Maxwell
Winston Maxwell
Research Fellow
and Télécom Paris

Winston Maxwell is Director of the Law & Digital Technology Studies department at Télécom Paris – Institut Polytechnique de Paris, where he teaches and writes on subjects related to the regulation of data, AI and telecommunications. He previously had a career in private practice as a partner of the international law firm Hogan Lovells.

Winston completed his law degree (JD) at Cornell, his PhD in economics at Télécom Paris, and his HDR (Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches) at the University of Paris Panthéon Sorbonne. His research focuses on the regulation of AI, and in particular human control over algorithmic systems, explainability and bias. Winston co-ordinates the “Operational AI Ethics” program at Telecom Paris, which includes AI Ethics teaching at Institut Polytechnique de Paris. In addition to being a research fellow at CERRE, Winston is a member of the Data and AI Ethics Council of Orange, the Scientific Advisory Board of ARCOM, the Ethics Board of the Paris Institute of Advanced Studies. He also contributes to standardisation activities on trustworthy AI within ISO/IEC JTC21/WG 4.

Winston Maxwell is Director of the Law & Digital Technology Studies department at Télécom Paris – Institut Polytechnique de Paris, where he teaches and writes on subjects related to the regulation of data, AI and telecommunications. He previously had a career in private practice as a partner of the international law firm Hogan Lovells.

Winston completed his law degree (JD) at Cornell, his PhD in economics at Télécom Paris, and his HDR (Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches) at the University of Paris Panthéon Sorbonne. His research focuses on the regulation of AI, and in particular human control over algorithmic systems, explainability and bias. Winston co-ordinates the “Operational AI Ethics” program at Telecom Paris, which includes AI Ethics teaching at Institut Polytechnique de Paris. In addition to being a research fellow at CERRE, Winston is a member of the Data and AI Ethics Council of Orange, the Scientific Advisory Board of ARCOM, the Ethics Board of the Paris Institute of Advanced Studies. He also contributes to standardisation activities on trustworthy AI within ISO/IEC JTC21/WG 4.

Karen Melchior
Karen Melchior
Member of the European Parliament

Karen Melchior is a Danish member of the European Parliament. Her parliamentary activities include coordinating the Renew Europe members of the Committee on Legal Affairs. She is also member of the Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality and Substitute Member of the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection.

As an MEP, Karen is invested in the regulation of digitalisation, platforms and AI. She is an advocate for digital rights and consumer protection in the era of digitalisation.

Karen Melchior is a Danish member of the European Parliament. Her parliamentary activities include coordinating the Renew Europe members of the Committee on Legal Affairs. She is also member of the Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality and Substitute Member of the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection.

As an MEP, Karen is invested in the regulation of digitalisation, platforms and AI. She is an advocate for digital rights and consumer protection in the era of digitalisation.

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