While AI and robotics reshape our reality, experts explore how these emerging tools could be used to create a more equitable future – from healthcare breakthroughs to Indigenous-led innovation.
In the season nine premiere of Monash’s podcast, learn how AI, deepfakes and humanoid robots are transforming human interaction and our perception of reality.
AI development is currently held by a small number of companies. Public vigilance can help ensure they stick to ethical use of the technology.
The automated vehicle “trolley problem” shows where self-driving technology can fail. But there could be upsides to coding human values into these machines.
While large language models such as ChatGPT offer vast potential in reshaping educational methods, the challenges are many.
Trace the increasingly blurred line between man and machine in the world of transhumanism on our “What Happens Next?” podcast.
Could our fascination with objectivity be the Pied Piper that led us to develop a machine some of us now fear and avoid?
We asked the artificial intelligence tool what the legal and ethical issues of using it were. Here’s what it told us.
This week on Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, learn how emerging technologies are changing the way we think about soldiers, and the way soldiers think about their jobs.
A new episode of Monash University's podcast, “What Happens Next?”, examines what the future will look like if we don’t consider the moral and ethical quandaries presented by new technologies on the battlefield.
With automation becoming increasingly widespread in industrial farming, new research examines the role and status of the “farmers” as they spend more and more time managing IT systems.
Human-centred design approaches can help solve some of our most pressing health challenges.
If humans are programming artificial intelligence, are we stuck with the human biases that inadvertently work their way into AI systems?
The challenge is to integrate AI into our society just like we’ve done with other valuable but dangerous technologies in the past, like electricity and cars.
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