[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Cfp: Decoding Artificial Sociality - New Media and Society special issue
Thu Jun 29 13:16:02 GMT 2023
Cfp: Decoding Artificial Sociality - New Media and Society special issue
Decoding Artificial Sociality: Technologies, Dynamics, Implications
Call for Papers for Special Issue in New Media and Society
Special Issue Editors:
Iliana Depounti, Loughborough University, United Kingdom,
(i.depounti /at/ lboro.ac.uk) <mailto:(i.depounti /at/ lboro.ac.uk)>
Simone Natale, University of Turin, Italy, (simone.natale /at/ unito.it)
<mailto:(simone.natale /at/ unito.it)>
Deadline for Abstract Submission: 30 September 2023
The emergence and development of technologies enabling communications
between humans and machines sparked a rethinking of the scope and
implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI). In this context, software
that mimics social interaction is becoming available to vast masses of
users around the world. Yet we still lack interpretative frameworks and
conceptual tools that go beyond the analysis of specific platforms to
capture new kinds of social experiences and engagements that these
technologies facilitate. This special issue aims to fill this gap. We
invite contributors to interrogate the implications, dynamics,
opportunities and risks of “Artificial Sociality,” i.e. technologies and
practices able to sustain the impression of social competence and
behavior in machines. These may include tools and software such as large
language models like ChatGPT, voice assistants, virtual influencers,
social bots and companionship chatbots such as Replika.
The special issue invites empirical as well as theoretical contributions
that provide stronger foundations to define, understand and critically
analyze emerging modalities of social interactions with AI technologies.
Featured articles will address questions such as:
- How do specific platforms, interfaces and computer programs build an
impression of sociality, and how do users respond to this? How do
algorithms and interfaces in the design of communicative AI
technologies stimulate social appropriations and projections in users?
- What are the ethical, social, and cultural implications
of artificial sociality?
- What are the risks associated with the application
of artificial sociality to areas including marketing, political
communication, news media, and social media?
- How do technologies that automate sociality reproduce or create
cultural and social bias for issues including gender, race, class?
- How do national, linguistic, cultural, religious contexts inform
how artificial sociality technologies are employed and appropriated by
different kinds of users?
- What are the ethical implications of assigning social roles to machines?
- What are the implications of mobilizing data about users’ social
behaviors to implement artificial sociality technologies?
Timeline
30 September 2023: Abstract submission deadline
31 October 2023: Decisions out to authors invited to submit full paper
31 March 2024: Deadline for full papers
2025: Tentative special issue publication
Submission
Proposals should include an extended abstract of up to 1,000 words
(references included) including a short explanation of how the paper
relates to the special issue theme, as well as a 100-150 words bio note
of the author(s). Please submit your proposal via email no later than 30
September 2023 to special issue editors Iliana Depounti,
(i.depounti /at/ lboro.ac.uk) <mailto:(i.depounti /at/ lboro.ac.uk)> and Simone
Natale, (simone.natale /at/ unito.it) <mailto:(simone.natale /at/ unito.it)>, with the
subject line “New Media and Society Special Issue: Artificial Sociality.”
Invited paper submissions of 8,000 words will be due 31 March 2024 and
will be submitted directly to the submission site for New Media and
Society https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/nms
<https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/nms> where they will undergo peer
review following the usual procedures of New Media & Society. Therefore,
the invitation to submit a full article does not guarantee acceptance
into the special issue.
No payment from the authors is required to publish in New Media & Society.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]