Talk by Deborah Raji

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19TH | 4PM | EMORY UNIVERSITY (ATWOOD 360)

Join us for a talk by Inioluwa Deborah Raji at Emory University! This in-person event will be held on Thursday October 19th, 4 pm till 5:15 pm, at the Atwood Cheminstry Building, Room 360. (Note change in room location!) Raji will share her insights on “Audits and Accountability in the Age of Artificial Intelligence”.

Abstract

When algorithms fall short of articulated expectations, people get hurt.

In order to hold those who build AI systems accountable for the consequences of their actions, we can operationalize a system for auditing algorithmic systems. Algorithm audits have for years been part of the conversation in the context of online platforms, but are just beginning to emerge as a mode of external oversight and evaluation regarding the deployment of “automated decision systems’ ‘ (ADS), and making their way into critical policy proposals as a primary mechanism for algorithmic accountability.

However, not all audits are made equal. In this talk, I discuss the ongoing challenges involved in executing algorithm audits and highlight the technical, policy, and institutional design interventions necessary for audits to serve as an effective mechanism for accountability.

Bio

Inioluwa Deborah Raji is a Mozilla fellow and CS PhD student at University of California, Berkeley, who is interested in questions on algorithmic auditing and evaluation. In the past, she worked closely with the Algorithmic Justice League initiative to highlight bias in deployed AI products. She has also worked with Google’s Ethical AI team and been a research fellow at the Partnership on AI and AI Now Institute at New York University working on various projects to operationalize ethical considerations in ML engineering practice. She has been named to Forbes 30 Under 30 and MIT Tech Review 35 Under 35 Innovators, and the TIME 100 list of most influential people in AI.

Sponsors

This event is sponsored by the Atlanta Interdisciplinary AI Network, Emory’s Departments of Quantitative Theory & Methods, English, and Computer Science, and the Hightower Fund.