Presented AI Ethics Recommendations for Geoscientists at the European Geosciences Union (EGU) in Vienna yesterday.
Summary
AI Ethics recommendations for geoscientists were presented yesterday at the European Geosciences Union (EGU) conference in Vienna, an event attended by approximately 20,000 researchers globally. The EGU conference encompasses a broad range of disciplines, including geology, hydrology, biogeosciences, remote sensing, oceanography, planetary, earth, space, and atmospheric sciences. The Geoethics session, where these recommendations were shared, saw strong attendance and featured diverse discussions on topics from the Anthropocene to pedagogical approaches in Ghana. The presenter is also scheduled to participate in a Great Debate on AI Ethics later in the week, alongside individuals involved with UNESCO.
Key takeaway
For geoscientists integrating AI into their research, understanding and applying ethical guidelines is becoming crucial. Your participation in discussions like those at EGU's Geoethics session can help shape responsible AI development within earth sciences. Consider how AI ethics frameworks, potentially influenced by UNESCO, might impact your project design and data handling.
Key insights
AI ethics recommendations were presented to geoscientists at the EGU conference.
Topics
- AI Ethics
- Geosciences
- European Geosciences Union
- Geoethics
- Artificial Intelligence
Best for: Research Scientist, AI Ethicist, Policy Maker
Related on AIssential
Editorial summary, takeaway, and curation by AIssential. Original article published by A Geodyssey – Geoscience Text Analytics and Enterprise Search Research.