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Research Handbook on Artificial Intelligence and Communication / edited by Seungahn Nah.
Edward Elgar AI Intelligence Disruptive Technology 2024 Available from 2023. Available online
View online- Format:
- Book
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Artificial intelligence.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (452 pages)
- Edition:
- First edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2023.
- Summary:
- "This forward-looking Research Handbook makes an insightful contribution to the emerging field of studies on communication of, by and with AI. Bringing together state-of-the-art research from over 50 leading international scholars across various fields, it provides a comprehensive overview of the complex intersections between AI and communication. The team of expert contributors explore key conceptual, theoretical and methodological approaches and examine a variety of ethical considerations, legal issues and policy implications of AI across diverse contexts. The Handbook spans a wide range of topics related to AI-empowered, immersed, mediated and integrated communications. These range from the role of news media and digital communication platforms in constructing, representing and framing AI across different countries and cultures, to the public understanding of, attitude towards and interaction with AI and its related technologies. Offering foundational guidance on AI and communication, the Research Handbook will stimulate further intellectual inquiry for future scholarship in this rapidly evolving area. Cross-disciplinary in scope, this dynamic Research Handbook will prove an essential reference for students and scholars in the fields of communication, computer science, data and information science, sociology, business, and education. Policymakers and practitioners will also find it a valuable resource to help inform AI-related regulations and policies"-- Provided by publisher.
- Contents:
- Contents: Preface
- Introduction to the research handbook on artificial intelligence and communication / Seungahn Nah
- Part I. Mapping research on artificial intelligence and communication
- 1. A systematic review of scholarship in AI and communication research (1990-2022) / Sumita Louis and Seungahn Nah
- 2. Ai-integrated communication: Conceptualization and a critical review / Donghee Yvette Wohn and Mashael Almoqbel
- 3. Toward a sociology of machines: An interviewing methodology for human-machine communication / Cait Lackey
- 4. Discovering developmental trajectories and trends of conversational agent research using dynamic topic modeling / Hüseyin Özçinar and Aylin Sabanci Bayramoğlu
- 5. A systematic review of scholarship on metaverse / Jun Luo, Sumita Louis, and Seungahn Nah
- Part II. Framing artificial intelligence
- 6. AI in schools and universities: Mapping central debates through enthusiasms and concerns / Kristjan Kikerpill and Andra Siibak
- 7. How news organizations and journalists understand artificial intelligence: Application of news language database to AI-related news stories / Jeongsub Lim
- 8. AI in portugal: News framing, tone, and sources / Paulo Nuno Vicente
- 9. AI bias, news framing, and mixed-methods approach / Jun Luo, Seungahn Nah, and Jungseock Joo
- Part III. Public understanding of artificial intellignece
- 10. Risk perceptions and trust mechanisms related to everyday ai / Hichang Cho and Rosalie Hooi
- 11. Fearing the future: Examining the conditional indirect correlation of attention to artificial intelligence news on artificial intelligence attitudes / Alex Kirkpatrick, Jay D. Hmielowski, and Amanda Boyd
- 12. A machine-learning approach to assessing public trust in ai-powered technologies / Poong Oh and Younbo Jung
- 13. Machine learning and deep learning for social science: A bibliometric approach / Jang Hyun Kim and Dongyan Nan
- 14. AI and data-driven political communication (re)shaping citizen-government interactions / Jérôme Duberry
- 15. AI folk tales: How nontechnical publics make sense of artificial intelligence / Barbara Pohl and Lauri Goldkind
- Part IV. Interacting with artificial intelligence
- 16. Facilitating stakeholder communication around ai-enabled systems and business processes / Matthew Bundas, Chasity Nadeau, Thanh H. Nguyen, Jeannine Shantz, Marcello Balduccini, Edward Griffor, and Tran Cao Son
- 17. The levels of automation and autonomy in the ai-augmented newsroom: Toward a multi-level typology of computational journalism / Hannes Cools, Baldwin Van Gorp, and Michaël Opgenhaffen
- 18. AI as communicative other: Critical relationality in human-ai communication / Marco Dehnert
- 19. Needs and practices for AI-mediated messaging in uncertain circumstances / Adam M. Rainear, Patric R. Spence, and Kenneth A. Lachlan
- 20. Why wasn't I ready for that? Suggestions and research directions for the use of machine agents in organizational life / Patric R. Spence
- 21. The media are social actors paradigm and beyond: Theory, evidence, and future research / Kun Xu, Fanjue Liu, Xiaobei Chen, and Matthew Lombard
- Part V. Policing artificial intelligence
- 22. Evaluating the self-disclosure of personal information to ai-enabled technology / Jessica K. Barfield
- 23. To reimagine more deeply: Understanding what AI communicates / John S. Seberger, Hyesun Choung, and Prabu David
- 24. Automated inequalities: Examining the social implications of artificial intelligence in China / Bibo Lin and Joanne Kuai
- 25. Design + power: Policy for the ecology of influence / Jasmine McNealy
- Index.
- Notes:
- Description based on print version record.
- Includes index.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Other Format:
- Print version: Nah, Seungahn Research Handbook on Artificial Intelligence and Communication
- ISBN:
- 1-80392-030-0
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