亚洲AV

Mason Researchers Land $1.39M to Study AI鈥檚 Effects on Global Culture

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professor leads a team of researchers from across 亚洲AV campuses that has been awarded a three-year, $1.39 million grant to study the economic and cultural determinants for global artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructures鈥攁nd describe their implications for national and international security.

headshot of singh
J. P. Singh. Photo provided

The grant was awarded by the Department of Defense鈥檚 esteemed , a joint program of the Office of Basic Research and the Office of Policy that supports social science research focused on expanding basic understanding of security. This year鈥檚 17 university teams were selected from more than 220 proposals and will receive a total of $28.7 million in grants.

鈥淧erhaps the most important and unique feature of our project is that we will use sophisticated big data models in computer and social sciences to specify the economic and cultural determinants,鈥 said Singh, the principal investigator of the grant.

鈥淭his analysis will be important for showing how聽cultural values and institutional priorities embedded in AI shape security鈥攁nd insecurity鈥攊n the 21st聽century.鈥

The final products from the grant will include forecasting models for AI infrastructures for different national and global contexts, enriched with field research and reports.

鈥淭his prestigious award recognizes the kind of transformative and multidisciplinary research for which Mason and the Schar School are known,鈥 said , dean of the Schar School. 鈥淧rofessor Singh's research cuts across academic boundaries to engage the insights of different disciplines in understanding complex public policy issues. His work speaks to not only academic researchers, but opinion leaders and policymakers as well.鈥

Singh has assembled a transdisciplinary team of veteran researchers from several academic fields to contribute to the project. In addition to Singh, a political economist, fellow researchers include:

  • , an award-winning machine learning engineer from Mason鈥檚 Department of Computer Science at the Volgenau School of Engineering and co-director of Mason鈥檚 (CAHMP);
  • Antonios Anastasopoulos, an assistant professor of computer science at Mason鈥檚 College of Engineering and Computing;
  • , an assistant professor at the Schar School and associate director of Mason鈥檚 Center for Security Policy Studies; and
  • , an ethicist, research assistant professor, and acting director of Mason鈥檚 Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy.

The team originated from Mason鈥檚 interdisciplinary (CAHMP), which researches how to structure and optimize reciprocal relationships between humans and assistive computing systems.

鈥淭his award speaks to the ability of this diverse team to聽identify unique intersectional problems and novel, cutting-edge methodologies,鈥 said Shehu. 鈥淚t also speaks to the聽strength of this multidisciplinary team that came together through many deliberate team-forming activities in the Center for Advancing Human-Machine Partnerships, their dedication to understanding one another across disciplines, and ultimately their passion to advancing interdisciplinary research.鈥

Singh noted that three graduate students and a postdoctoral researcher will be hired to assist in the project.

Two of the 17 grants awarded this year went to Mason researchers. Itamara Lochard, director of Cyber Policy Studies at Mason's Center for Assurance Research and Engineering, received funding for her project, Habitus and the Information Environment: An Ethnographic Case Study of Digital Anthropology.

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