Questioning History in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Date/TimeQuestioning History in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Thursday - Friday
11 Apr - 12 Apr 2024

Location
Social Science Matrix

Event Type
Symposium

Shane Denson
Associate Professor of Film & Media Studies, Stanford University

Ekaterina Babintseva
Assistant Professor, History, Purdue University

The AI & History Symposium is scheduled for April 11th and 12th, 2024, at the the Social Science Matrix (820 Social Sciences Building). Seminars will take place all day, beginning at 10am. This event is free and open to the public. No RSVP required.

Speakers

Shane DensonAssociate Professor of Film & Media StudiesStanford University

Ekaterina BabintsevaAssistant Professor, HistoryPurdue University

Facilitators

David BatesProfessorUC Berkeley

Johan FredrikzonVisiting ScholarUC Berkeley

Jacob GabouryAssociate ProfessorUC Berkeley

Julia IrwinPhD CandidateUC Berkeley

Xiaochang LiAssistant ProfessorStanford University

Massimo MazzottiProfessorUC Berkeley

Aaron Mendon-PlasekResident FellowYale University

Jessica RiskinProfessorStanford University

Event Agenda

Seminars Thursday, 4/11
in the Social Sciences Matrix

10am – 12pm
Aaron Mendon-Plasek, Yale University
“‘AI Winters’ as Moral Prejudice: How Machine Learning Origin Stories Constrained Political Policy, Scientific Imaging, & Legal Reason-Giving”
—and—
Ekaterina Babintseva, Purdue University
“The Mind and the Algorithm: Bringing the Unconscious to Soviet Artificial Intelligence”

2 – 4pm
Johan Fredrikzon, UC Berkeley
“The Past as Error: Archival Regimes in Cybernetics & AI”
—and—
David Bates, UC Berkeley
“Prediction is not Anticipation: Machine Learning & the Historicity of the Human”

Keynote: 5-7 pm in Dwinelle 142
Shane Denson, Stanford University
“AI and the Future of (Media) History”
in Dwinelle 142

Seminars Friday, 4/12
in the Social Sciences Matrix

10am – 12pm
Julia Irwin, UC Berkeley
“William James’s Neural Network, Fringe Consciousness, & Historical Time”
—and—
Christina Vagt, UC Santa Barbara
“Recursive History: The Economic Reason of AI”

1 – 2:30pm
Jacob Gaboury, UC Berkeley & Xiaochang Li, Stanford University Roundtable: “AI History as Media History”

3 – 5pm
Robin Manley Mihran, UC Berkeley “Genealogy & Form: Foucault’s Anti-Nietzschean Theses on History”
—and—
Jessica Riskin, Stanford University
“Turing Among the Machines”

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of RhetoricDepartment of Film & MediaTownsend Center for the HumanitiesBerkeley Center for New MediaCenter for Science, Technology, Medicine, & SocietyStiftelsen Gustaf Sterns Fond, and Stiftelsen Karl Staaffs fond. Information regarding this symposium can be found on the Department of Rhetoric’s upcoming events webpage.