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[Commlist] Call for Papers: AI and warfare
Fri Jun 07 02:12:37 GMT 2024
The Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG) and
the Department of Media Studies, University of Bonn invite submissions
to an international conference on the topic of artificial intelligence
and future warfare in Berlin from 16-18 October, 2024. The deadline for
the abstracts is 7 July, 2024. More information is also available at
www.hiig.de/events/ai-warfare/ <https://www.hiig.de/events/ai-warfare/>.
Call for papers: An International Conference in Berlin, Germany, 16-18
October 2024
AI and warfare – Investigating the technological and political domains
of current conflicts
Global conflicts and challenges to international security are among the
most pressing issues of our time. Artificial intelligence is
increasingly shaping the ways in which warfare is conducted, adding both
complications and urgency to the issues caused by the current major
geopolitical shifts. AI is one of the driving factors of technological
change in warfare in general, with its major effects mainly related to
new degrees of complexity in automation and new forms of human-machine
interaction. On the one hand, this change introduces new capabilities in
weapons systems, in particular in the fields of processing information,
generating knowledge and the automation of decision-making. Most
prominently, this results in a decreasing level of human intervention
and control, thereby reshaping the relationship between human operators
and autonomous weapons systems. On the other hand, AI-related
developments do not only concern the kinetic dimension of warfare but
also expand into what military theory calls the ‘information domain’.
Shaping and controlling narratives has been an integral part of
conflicts and warfare for a long time, with disinformation and
propaganda campaigns utilising the most recent (media) technologies for
this purpose. The functionality of AI applications will increasingly be
integrated in these efforts, as can already be observed with the
dissemination of manipulated content on social media. AI-based
technologies are also deployed in cyber warfare, which is not limited to
the singular hacking of a system, but rather targeted to directly affect
whole digital military infrastructures or civilian entities in politics,
the economy or research.
The objective of the conference is to explore these domains of modern
warfare in order to develop a more accurate picture of the various
effects of AI in military contexts. Another goal is to broaden the
perspective of the military deployment of AI beyond questions of weapon
systems and their control, by particularly looking at adversarial uses
of AI in hybrid forms of warfare in the information domain. The
conference particularly aims to develop and establish a dialogue between
the research on these two domains that are often explored separately.
Against this background and in this spirit, we invite contributions
along the following lines of inquiry:
(1) AI in military technologies and the relationship between humans and
machines
The developments of machine learning and automated decision-making in
networked and data-rich environments do not simply change weapons
systems but rather have to be modelled as elements in complex systems of
humans and machines. Military applications of AI, for example, pose
various kinds of problems at the level of human control over these
systems which can exert potentially lethal effects. They are also at the
core of networked information processing (for example to select targets)
and decision-making based on complex forms of synthesising data.
Information superiority, situational awareness and electronic warfare
are crucial issues for an understanding of the contemporary forms of
military applications of AI-based weapons systems.
Talks in this section may address historical or contemporary examples
for AI-based information processing in military systems and decision
making such as target selection, including various forms of cyber
liabilities of military networks and infrastructures (for example
communication infrastructure as well as logistics or energy supply). It
may also explore current technologies based on concepts of human-machine
interaction, with questions on the role of interfaces, including
battlefield management systems, or human-machine teaming in the
interactions between manned and unmanned systems. Relevant contributions
in this section may also analyse how research and development of
military technologies are informed by larger cultural narratives of
AI-enabled weapons.
(2) AI and the relationship between political processes and information
warfare
Automated and autonomous forms of information generation and processing
also extend deeply into the media systems of societies, its respective
militaries, civil institutions and political systems. Corresponding
questions concern various forms of automated manipulation of public
opinion, via bots or targeted misinformation (including deep fakes) on
social media platforms. This domain particularly addresses the political
decision-making processes in an information and media environment that
is increasingly influenced by AI technologies.
Talks in this section may address topics such as the use of AI in
efforts to manipulate public opinion or political processes as part of
hybrid attacks or warfare in the information domain. Besides the use of
generative AI in producing manipulated content, phenomena also include
AI-enabled mass surveillance, as well as the targeting, profiling and
tracing of individuals in exerting power or with manipulative intentions
(particularly evoking emotional responses). Other issues concern the
question of how these developments challenge the idea of democratic
legitimacy or mechanisms of regulation and accountability (e.g.
democratic control of autonomous decision-making in military contexts).
We welcome contributions from scholars of diverse disciplines such as
computer science, cultural studies, political science, international
relations & security studies, media and communication studies, military
studies, psychology, sociology and science and technology studies.
Interdisciplinary approaches as well as perspectives from practitioners
and developers are also encouraged.
Submission process
Abstractsof approximately 2,500 characters in length (excl. references)
should be submitted no later than 7 July, 2024 to (ai-warfare /at/ hiig.de)
<mailto:(ai-warfare /at/ hiig.de)>.
Speakers will be notified at the latest by 31 July, 2024.
More information is also available at www.hiig.de/events/ai-warfare/
<https://www.hiig.de/events/ai-warfare/>.
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