Periodic Reporting for period 2 - Human Plus (HUMAN+ Towards expertise in enhanced human/technology experience)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2022-07-01 al 2025-06-30
The overall objectives were to:
1. Connect computer science researchers with arts and humanities researchers and enterprise to forge a human-centric approach to technological development.
2. Appoint 18 experienced researchers over five years, each for a duration of two years, to create a cadre of research leaders who understand technology as well as humanistic principles.
3. Develop stronger partnerships between the Computer Sciences, Arts & Humanities and industry, developing the discourse of human-centred technology, creating pathways for internships and secondments.
2. Two calls for applications were delivered between 2021 and 2022, appointing 6 world-class researchers for two year fellowships. All had multidisciplinary teams of supervisors from the Arts and Humanities and the Computer Sciences and enterprise. Fellows worked on projects relating to (Anti-)Social AR Experiences: Mental Well-Being, Social Behaviour, Identity, and Prejudices in Augmented Reality Experiences with Digitally Created or Modified Human Bodies; Corporate Governance for Trustworthy and Human-Centric Artificial Intelligence; The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Data for Assessment of Self-directed Language Learning; Researching perception of embodied virtual humans to improve immersive virtual reality; and Morphological manipulations of the virtual body and physio-cognitive effects.
3. Fellows were provided with disciplinary rigour and training, networking opportunities to enhance their transferable skills, career development potential and opportunities to engage informally with an enterprise partner. The latter included representatives from Volograms, Accenture, Adaptemy, Akara and Seenel Imaging. The fellows attended 99 training activities between them, an average of 16.5 each. Fellows contributed to an average of 17 research presentations and conferences and co-organised an average of 3.5 research events.
5. A website and a series of public engagement and profile building initiatives were launched to promote the programme and the concepts underpinning it, as well as the fellows and their supervisor teams. For instance: On 11 June 2020 the programme was launched with an online panel discussion entitled ‘Human+Technology beyond Covid-19’ with 160 participants https://humanplus.ie/human-launch/(si apre in una nuova finestra). On 9 April 2021, the programme organised a public lecture by Professor Genevieve Bell, Director of the School of Cybernetics at the Australian National University on ‘The New Cybernetics? Making sense of the 21st century’, with 226 participants.
The VOICES project, an ERC funded project (101097003) led by Jane Ohlmeyer with computer sciences; Knowledge Technologies for Democracy (HEU project 101094302) led by Jennifer Edmond with Computer Sciences; From Cinematic Realism to Extended Reality: Reformulating Screen Studies at the Precipice of Hyper-reality’ project led by Jennifer O’Meara, (Irish Research Council); The HARNESS project (Harnessing AI and Data-Intensive Technologies) an HEU MCSA Doctoral Training network (101169409) led by David Lewis, Computer Science, involving TCD Law.
2. The 6 fellows appointed published 28 research peer reviewed outputs between them. Of the 28 publications, 18 were collaborative; 9 involved supervisors as co-authors. The collective works have received a total of 98 citations to date and Springer Nature reports that Nicola Palladino’s book The Content Governance Dilemma - Digital Constitutionalism, Social Media and the Search for a Global Standard has been accessed 12,000 times to date.
3.To develop stronger partnerships between the Computer Sciences, Arts & Humanities and industry, developing the discourse of human-centred technology, creating pathways for internships and secondments, the programme:
- Engaged with up to 100 organisations, with 6 partners secured for informal secondments and as enterprise mentors.
- Delivered the Human+ Tech Talks discussion series involving fellows and their supervisors and enterprise mentors, available on youtube and on soundcloud.
- Developed a Future Lab format.
- Delivered 1 coauthored white paper on ‘considerations of identity in the metaverse’ arising from the Future Lab with enterprise partners and supervisors (https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/5-162(si apre in una nuova finestra)).
- 1 PhD student was funded on a project arising from a fellowship-supervisor collaboration with an industry partner.
- 1 fellow secured Irish research funding for a follow-on project related to their secondment, while their secondment partner also sought EU funding in parallel.
- 1 fellow secured Irish funding for a follow-on project with their supervisors.
- 1 fellow competitively secured access to medical devices to gather data for their project.
- The project partnered with DARIAH to host the DARIAH Innovation Forum in 2022, with the public keynote by Michela Magas, innovation advisor to the European Commission.
- The Human+ project was referenced in the Finnish Impact Foundation’s 2024 report on ‘the state of industry academia collaboration in the social sciences, humanities and arts Perspectives from the Nordics and beyond’.
- Piloted a research enterprise ‘secondment’ model to inform future fellowship programmes – noting that the term ‘secondment’ can be problematic for some organisations to facilitate on legal grounds.
- Generated insights from secondment partnerships pioneering culture change in socio cultural human-centric technology design in areas ranging from a focus on emotions at the human-chatbot-interface to working with a robotic start-up focusing on implementing their disinfectant robot; uncovering knowledge surrounding how people mediate the space around their bodies (i.e. their personal space) in the context of social virtual environments; brain imaging and immersive virtual reality; intelligent tutoring systems; corporate AI risk management frameworks and the day to day ethical/responsible AI practices; immersive media, cognition, and digital behaviour; identity in the metaverse.
3. Fellows were provided with training and opportunities to present and communicate their research to general audiences, including via a series of blogs and web profiles: https://humanplus.ie/category/blog/(si apre in una nuova finestra). On average each fellow delivered 9.7 communication and public engagement activities.