1 Oct 2020 - 2 Oct 2020 All day ONLINE

Description

The workshop comprises four sessions. You can register for more than one workshop session. Please register for each of the four sessions if you wish to attend the entire workshop. Registration URLs can be found under ‘Related Links’, on the right-hand side of this page.

Queries: contact Una Yeung

 

Thursday 1 October

Session 1: Social Media and Mental Health

Speakers: Michelle O’Reilly (University of Leicester), Amy Orben

(University of Cambridge)

Session 2: AI and Suicide Risk Detection

Speakers: Glen Coppersmith (Qntfy), Eileen Bendig (Ulm University)

Friday 2 October

Session 3: From Understanding to  Automating Therapeutic Dialogues

Speakers: Raymond Bond (UlsterUniversity), Rose McCabe (City, University of London)

Session 4: The Future of Digital Mental Healthcare

Speakers: Valentin Tablan (IESO Digital Health), Maria Liakata (Queen Mary University of London)

 

Workshop overview

Convenors

Bill Byrne (University of Cambridge), Shauna Concannon (University of Cambridge), Ann Copestake (University of Cambridge), Ian Roberts (University of Cambridge), Marcus Tomalin (University of Cambridge), Stefanie Ullmann (University of Cambridge)

Language-based Artificial Intelligence (AI) is having an ever greater impact on how we communicate and interact. Whether overtly or covertly, such systems are essential components in smartphones, social media sites, streaming platforms, virtual personal assistants, and smart speakers. Long before the worldwide Covid-19 lockdowns, these devices and services were already affecting not only our daily routines and behaviours, but also our ways of thinking, our emotional well-being and our mental health. Social media sites create new opportunities for peer-group pressure, which can heighten feelings of anxiety, depression and loneliness (especially in young people); malicious Twitterbots can influence our emotional responses to important events; and online hate speech and cyberbullying can cause victims to have suicidal thoughts.

Consequently, there are frequent calls for stricter regulation of these technologies, and there are growing concerns about the ethical appropriateness of allowing companies to inculcate addictive behaviours to increase profitability. Infinite scrolls and ‘Someone is typing a comment’ indicators in messaging apps keep us watching and waiting, and we repeatedly return to check the number of ‘likes’ our posts have received. The underlying software has often been purposefully crafted to trigger biochemical responses in our brains (eg the release of serotonin and/or dopamine), and these neurotransmitters strongly influence our reward-related cognition. The powerful psychological impact of such technologies is not always a positive one. Indeed, it sometimes seems appropriate that those who interact with these technologies, and those who inject drugs, are all called ‘users’.

However, while AI-based communications technologies undoubtedly have the potential to harm our mental health, they can also offer forms of psychological support. Machine Learning systems can measure the physical and mental well-being of users by evaluating their language use in social media posts, and a variety of empathetic therapy, care, and mental health chatbots, apps, and conversational agents are already widely available. These applications demonstrate some of the ways in which well-designed language-based AI technologies can offer significant psychological and practical support to especially vulnerable social groups. Indeed, medical professionals have started to consider the possibility that the future of mental healthcare will inevitably be digital, at least in part. Yet, despite their potential benefits, developments such as these raise a number of non-trivial regulatory and ethical concerns.

This two-day virtual interdisciplinary workshop brings together a diverse group of researchers from academia, industry and government, with specialisms in many different disciplines, to discuss the different effects, both positive and negative, that AI-based communications technologies are currently having, and will have, on mental health and well-being.

 

Download and share the event poster.

Programme

Thursday 1 October 2020

Session 1: Social Media and Mental Health

10:50 - 11:00

Attendees join Session 1

11:00 - 11:10

Welcome and Introduction (Giving Voice to Digital Democracies team)

11:10 - 11:50

Michelle O’Reilly  (University of Leicester)

11:50 - 12:30

Amy Orben (University of Cambridge)

Session 2: AI and Suicide Risk Detection

13:50 - 14:00

Attendees join session 2

14:00 -14:10

Welcome and Introduction (Giving Voice to Digital Democracies team)

14:10 - 14:50

Glen Coppersmith (Qntfy)

14: 50 - 15:30

Eileen Bendig (Ulm University)

Friday 2 October 2020

Session 3: From Understanding to Automatic Therapeutic Dialogues

10:50 - 11:00

Attendees join Session 3

11:00 - 11:10

Welcome and Introduction (Giving Voice to Digital Democracies team)

11:10 - 11:50

Raymond Bond (Ulster University)

11:50 -12:30

Rose McCabe  (City, University of London)

Session 4: The Future of Digital Mental Health Care

13:50 - 14:00

Attendees join Session 4

14:00 - 14:10

Welcome and Introduction (Giving Voice to Digital Democracies team)

14:10 - 14:50

Valentin Tablan (IESO Digital Health)

14:50 - 15:30

Maria Liakata (Queen Mary University of London)

Workshop booklet

For further details and speaker biographies, you can view or download this booklet.

Upcoming Events

CENTRE FOR RESEARCH IN THE ARTS, SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES

Tel: +44 1223 766886
Email enquiries@crassh.cam.ac.uk