The AI + Society Initiative aims at defining problems and identifying solutions to essential issues related to ethical AI and technology development. The research leverages a transdisciplinary approach to advance AI methods and tools, with a focus on responsible deployment and application.
The Initiative promotes an inclusive research agenda with a specific focus on amplifying voices and research that does not perpetuate systems of injustice and oppression for affected communities. The research and conversations we aim to highlight focus on the inclusion of voices and perspectives of women, youth, seniors, Indigenous People, LGBTQIA2S+, racialized communities, people with disabilities, and linguistic minorities–and those at the intersection of these identities.
The rapid pace of AI development adds to the challenges facing modern societies and their citizens, simultaneously raising multiple ethical, legal, and policy issues. This requires a better understanding of the societal implications of AI.
Thanks to a generous gift from Scotiabank, the Initiative was announced on January 28th, 2020 with the creation of the Scotiabank Fund for the AI + Society Initiative at the University of Ottawa to support the development of a Canadian AI + Society Initiative, leading to a better understanding and framing of the ethical, legal and societal implications of AI research and its uses. The Scotiabank Fund supports two research programs on AI and Inclusion, and AI and Regulation. In Summer 2020, the Alex Trebek Forum for Dialogue funded a new research program on AI for Healthy Humans and Environments that lead to the creation of two additional research streams on AI and Healthcare and AI and Environment.
The Scotiabank Fund for the AI and Society Initiative supports a research program which focuses on designing ethical and inclusive AI systems and shaping global AI regulation.
Beyond supporting the overarching goals of the Initiative, the Scotiabank Fund for the AI and Society Initiative supports research seeking to (re)define problems and to identify solutions to challenging issues related to ethical AI and technology development. Through our research activities, we offer students new opportunities to gain experience, locally and abroad, in an emerging field that will have profound implications (both positive and negative) on Canadian society in the years to come. The outreach component—lectures, conferences, training, tools, frameworks, and white papers—will help position and support Canadian thought-leadership on AI ethics, law and policy.