Hodges' Model: Welcome to the QUAD: conference

Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...

Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Monday, February 17, 2025

Harnessing the Power of Artificial Intelligence to Improve Outcomes for Patients with for Long-Term Health Conditions

 Dear Colleagues and Friends,

We are organising a Special Session: Harnessing the Power of Artificial Intelligence to Improve Outcomes for Patients with for Long-Term Health Conditions

(https://aiih.cc/lthc/) in the International Conference on AI in Healthcare (AIiH), 8-10 September 2025, Jesus College, University of Cambridge.

We would like to accept both full length papers (12 pages plus references) and short abstracts (up to 5 pages including references) for special sessions. Submission guideline can be found here, including paper templates in both Word and LaTeX: https://aiih.cc/paper-submission/

The accepted full papers and abstracts will be published in the Springer LNCS volumes.

Full Paper submission deadline:            Friday 11 April 2025

Abstract submission deadline:               Monday 30 June 2024

We are looking forward to meeting you.

Best wishes

Shang-Ming Zhou

Professor in e-Health | Faculty of Health | University of Plymouth | PL4 8AA | UK.

Email :  shangming.zhou AT plymouth.ac.uk; smzhou AT ieee.org

https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/staff/shang-ming-zhou

https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/research/centre-for-health-technology

Sunday, February 09, 2025

iConference 2025 & new Community Informatics Research Network list

Dear CI colleagues,

I am writing with two updates.

First, this listserv* has been moved to the iSchool at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign: https://lists.ischool.illinois.edu/lists/info/ciresearchers. To post a new message to this mailing list, please use the following email address: ciresearchers AT ischool.illinois.edu

I'd like to thank the Metropolitan New York Library Council for hosting this list during the past several years. We moved the list to the iSchool at Illinois where it will be supported in the years ahead.

Second, the new iSchools Community Informatics group will meet during the on-site portion of the 2025 iConference at Indiana University on Wednesday 19 March 2 PM-3:30 PM local time in Bloomington, Indiana. To learn more about the iConference, please visit the conference website: https://www.ischools.org/iconference



Dr. Khalid Hossein has generously agreed to help lead the iSchools Community Informatics group *virtual* session on Tuesday 11 March 9:30 PM-11:00 PM local time in Bloomington, Indiana. Khalid and I are hoping to provide opportunities for everyone to engage virtually in both sessions of the conference.

Please stay tuned for more information about the conference.

Thank you,
Colin

Colin Rhinesmith, Ph.D.
Pronouns: he/him
Visiting Associate Professor
Director, Digital Equity Action Research (DEAR) Lab
School of Information Sciences
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

 *My source, with my editing. PJ

Thursday, October 10, 2024

British Computer Society: AI for One Health and Planetary Health

 BCS SPECIALIST GROUP ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (BCS SGAI)! 

AI for One Health and Planetary Health: Where Are We?

Friday November 8th 2024 - British Computer Society London Office (near Moorgate Underground)

Invitation to Register

http://www.bcs-sgai.org/health2024/

A full-day event with invited talks on the following topics:

  • One Health and Planetary Health: the case for considering a unified health perspective
  • Translational Diagnostics in Companion Animals
  • Mixed AI approaches to surfacing information hidden in veterinary electronic health records
  • Hands-on Tutorial: Low-Code/No-Code AI: Democratise AI for Text, Images, and Audio
  • AI for One Health and Planetary Health: is there a generic framework?
  • Low-Code/No-Code AI for Biomedical Image Classification: Visual Impairment as a case stud
  • Low-Code/No-Code AI for Planetary Health: World Fisheries and Aquaculture as a case study
The  21st  century  brings  major  global  challenges,  including  climate  change  and  rapid  population  ageing, calling  for  transdisciplinary  involvement  of  diverse  sectors  and  stakeholders,  including  academics  and students, companies and societal organisations. One Health considers human health, animal health, and our shared  environment  as  parts  of  a  deeply  interconnected  system.  Our  environment  is  changing  and  it  is affecting  our  health.  Planetary  Health  emphasises  that  everything  is  connected:  "the  quality  of  the  air  we breathe and of the water we drink, the quality and quantity of food we produce, our exposure to infectious diseases, and even the habitability of the places where we live". Digitalisation is happening in both human and veterinary medicine. Human-AI collaboration can bring humans and AI together to gain more valuable insights  than  either  could  achieve  alone. The  event  comprises  a  number  of  talks  with  speakers  from  the Animal  and  Plant  Health  Agency  (APHA.gov.uk),  Veterinary  Health  Innovation  Engine  (vHive),  Small Animal  Veterinary  Surveillance  Network  (SAVSNET),  National  Health  Service  (NHS)  England,  and  UK universities.  

Low-code/no-code AI is on the rise with Large Language Models (LLMs) at its core, including multimodal LLMs that can produce content (text, image, video, or audio/speech) as output (generative AI). Come along to the hands-on tutorial if you are interested in content generation and content analysis of text, images and  audio  with  open-source  LLMs from  Google,  Facebook,  Microsoft  and  OpenAI  in  just  3  lines  of python  code  (low-code  AI)  and  LLM  prompting  (no  code  AI).  The  exercises  can  be  executed  in  1  to  5 minutes using Google Colab (free of charge for basic use and without setup to use).  

There will be Certificates of Attendance for those who register and attend the event.

We hope that you will come and join us, and that you enjoy this new offering from the BCS SGAI.

Full details are available at http://www.bcs-sgai.org/health2024/

Reduced delegate fees!!
The  delegate  fee  is  just  £50  plus  VAT  for  BCS  and  SGAI  members  and  £90  plus  VAT  for  others. This includes  attendance  at  the  event,  lunch  and  refreshments.  A  special  rate  of  £35  plus  VAT  is  available  for students. A Group Discount Rate is available for group bookings of three or more.

--------------------------------------------------------
To register for future mailings about SGAI events go to http://www.bcs-sgai.org/register/

Max Bramer
Chair BCS Specialist Group on Artificial Intelligence (bcs-sgai.org)

Wednesday, September 04, 2024

Laughter and Medicine Conference

Manon, Laughing Gas, 2019, installation, Kunsthaus Zürich
photographer: Franca Candrian, 2022.

British Academy/Wellcome Trust Conferences bring together scholars and specialists from around the world to explore themes related to health and wellbeing.

'Connecting knowledge across the disciplines, this conference will put practicing doctors in direct dialogue with researchers in the humanities – especially scholars of literature, cinema and cultural history. Together, they will seek to understand the social, diagnostic, therapeutic and physiological implications of laughter, inside and outside the clinic. Laughter is not always the 'best medicine', nor is it linked only to comedy and enjoyment. 'Healing laughter' differs markedly from pathological laughter, hysterical laughter, forced or bitter laughter, laughter aimed at mitigating awkwardness in unsuccessful communication, laughter intended to deceive, or laughter signifying fear, discomfort or aggression. Irony and other double-coded signifiers that abound in comic and parodic representations of medical practitioners and their patients often reveal medicine’s paradoxical place in various cultural imaginaries and in individual and collective experience.

This conference will study the diverse forms of laughter occurring around medicine in particular eras and cultural environments alongside comparative analysis of patterns and problematics over the long history of Western medicine and its representations.'

         https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/events/british-academy-conferences/laughter-and-medicine/

individual
|
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
|
group

I don't find this funny!


 I laughed so much it hurt! 


"All the world's a stage"

Politics is a running joke - that's never funny.

The human epic of triumph and tragedy.

Previously (with overlap):

arts :: drama :: poetry :: literature :: narrative

Monday, August 12, 2024

Laws of Form - Society, Conference, and Journal (to follow)

Finding out last minute at the end of last week, I attended the Laws of Form Conference at the Old Library, Liverpool University, 19 Abercromby Square L69 7ZN, UK. It was 17 minutes away by rail, so I made the short walk from Lime Street Station, as pre-existing commitments allowed.

The Society, devoted to the ideas and work of George Spencer-Brown is quite new 2023. I was greeted with a welcome that actively encourages the widest range of ideas as relates to LoF, the AGM also revealed future plans.

Laws of Form Books: Source lof50.com 

I've been on the LoF mail list for many years and every so often I've replied to themes that also touch thinking on Hodges' model. Now trying to look at Hodges' model more formally, learning of the conference I had to attend.

At the close today the vote of thanks expressed for the support of University of Liverpool and West DenHaag was shared here.


After the introduction, the first session by Andrew Crompton, of The Alternative Natural Philosophy Association, How to Make a Horse Vanish included insights into the scope of George Spencer-Brown's thought, combining philosophy, design, and architecture with great visuals. All the sessions were interesting, helpful and stimulating, including several that were technical detailing applications of Laws of Form:

".. Spencer-Brown has pointed out that he discovered an arithmetic that underlies Boolean algebra. This arithmetic is the Spencer-Brown Calculus of Indications generated by the mark <> (here written in typographical form) subject to the relations of calling, <><>=<>, and crossing, <<>> = , where, in crossing, the two marks are erased in the plane of writing. .." 
KEYNOTE Louis H Kauffman, Arithmetic in 'Laws of Form' - also Weds 7th Aug

Even though I could not understand the approach, listening to purposes, application and and the terminology is useful. 

I was online Thursday, and only followed the first two sessions. I have been exasperated with the various -isms, a response possibly shared with Jonathan Mize, Mind, Your Business: Reimagining business, art and science:

"The world is aching for a fresh approach to how we interact with one another. A popular prescription for our ailment is some type of new “ism,” some meticulously engineered set of dictums that propose to “fix society” once and for all. In this paper, I offer no “isms,” no grand new paradigms and no set of rules that humanity “must follow,” lest they slip into oblivion. What I offer is something very simple—a re-seeing of our approach to our everyday lives, a lifting of the vision from the “ills” and the “evils” of the world to the potential for our collective creation and experience. ..." Thurs 8th Aug.

Secondly, Diego Lucio Rapoport Campodonico, presented The Geometry and Topology of the Primal Distinction: Phenomenology and cosmo-sociomorphisms. If the public's understanding of science can be represented as a morphism, then it was extended here so I will explore.

There was a slide in the session of Florian Grote, Playing the Game of Counting to Two: On the question of requisite re-entries in communication including artificial intelligence (Friday 9th August)that I could immediately relate to Hodges' model:

"In the poem which provided the title for the book Only Two Can Play This Game, James Keys (1971) aka George Spencer-Brown provides the reader with a thorough reflection on the unlikely inevitability of a communicative – a social – world."

I can't cover all the examples of interest, but over the years systems, systems theory invariably crop up. Through the UKSS and Open University I have come across people with ties to the Schumacher Inst.. This thread continued 10th Aug, with Laws of Context with Philip Franses.

Hans Rudolf Straub's The Form and the Bit as Basic Building Blocks of Information: A comparison stood out as a source of reading conjoining LoF and informatics.

Marcus J. Carney's talk (also Sat 10th) Letting Go. The Form of Mourning reminded me of what does a single discipline mean when it uses the term 'applied'? Nursing a cold I didn't want to use the mic, but I think Marcus's work could support theory given the attention on trauma-informed care and therapy at present. There were obvious immediate connections in the abstract, borne out (well delivered!) in his presentation.
"Threnos in antiquity was understood as the activity of mourning. S. Freud dichotomised mourning with melancholia, entangling both in libido. A. and M. Mitscherlich took this up in the 1960s for the German people post Holocaust as their “inability to mourn”. J. Ruesen tried “Trauer” in this context again in the 1990s as “mourning humaneness”, bloating its abstraction. While M. Rothberg introduced the notion of “implicated subject” to the field/s of historical violence and injustices to modify R. Hilberg’s perpetrator-victim-bystander triad in 2019, the German “Historikerstreit 2.0” was raging, but not about Rothberg’s “implication”, yet about his 2009 concept of “multidirectional memory”, wherewith he demonstrated how the Holocaust had enabled the articulation of other histories of victimisation at the same time that it had been declared "unique" among human-perpetrated horrors, while uncovering the more surprising fact that public memory of the Holocaust emerged in part thanks to postwar events that seemingly had little to do with it."
As noted in a previous post, there's also the approach of Parallel Histories. You wonder from where dialogue can follow: Israel and Palestine ... but it must. On Wednesday the recent rioting impinged on proceedings with directions to close earlier and dining plans impacted. 

After too many years I must explore George Spencer-Brown's Laws of Form and try to apply it to Hodges' model as an additional and alternative theoretical resource.

The GSB Society have a forthcoming journal which I will post about here as details follow.

The next conference is in 2026 and will be based in Cambridge - a great prospective source of ideas.

Saturday, March 09, 2024

10th Biennial Threshold Concepts Conference: July 2-4, 2025

Save the date!

As a scholar who is active in Threshold Concepts, you may be interested to know that the biennial conference on Threshold Concepts will be held at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC, Canada on July 2-4, 2025. More information on the call for proposals and conference logistics will be available in the late spring. But for now, follow us on X (formerly Twitter) @ThresholdConcep and join our Linkedin group (Threshold Concepts Conference 2025) to get the most up to date information.

Conference Invitation

Dear Colleagues,

As you may know, the biennial conference on Threshold Concepts will be held at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC, Canada on July 2-4, 2025. As a scholar who has been active with Threshold Concepts in the last few years, we hope that you will consider submitting a proposal and attending the conference. The call for proposals will be open October 15 – December 20, 2024. 

Please check out the conference information on our website (https://thresholdconcepts.home.blog/) and reach out if you have any questions.

All the best,

Julie
Email: julie.rattray AT durham.ac.uk
Prof. Julie Rattray
Professor of Higher Education and Director of EDI at School of Education
Chair of Durham Disabled Staff Network
Durham University
Confluence Building
Stockton Road
Durham
DH1 3LE

 

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Information and Records Management Society [IRMS] Conference Bursaries

Dear list,

Apologies for the cross-posting. I am forwarding this on behalf of the Information and Records Management Society.

If you think you can’t afford to attend the IRMS Conference or that it’s not the place for someone like you, it could be time to think again! That’s because we’re offering FREE bursary places that will give 3 people from under-represented groups an all-inclusive ticket to IRMS24 in Brighton on 12-14 May.

But you’ll need to be quick – the deadline is less than 2 weeks away!

There are 3 categories of bursary available:
  1. New Generation – open to anyone aged 30 or under at the start of the conference on 12 May 2024
  2. Diversity and Inclusion – offered to an information professional or student from an ethnic minority background, or who has a disability (or both)
  3. International – available to IRMS members based outside of the UK and Ireland
Each bursary provides 1 fully-funded place at the whole event, including all conference sessions, food and refreshments, evening social events, and two nights’ luxury B&B accommodation at the conference venue, the DoubleTree by Hilton Brighton Metropole hotel. Please note we are unable to cover any travel costs.

You must meet certain criteria to be eligible for a bursary. If you do, then to apply, all you have to do is tell us who you are, which bursary you are applying for and why, and how you will benefit from being at the IRMS Conference 2024 – including which speakers or topics you are most excited about! We also ask how you would share your experience at the event.

You haven’t got long - the deadline for applications is Sunday 10 March.
For full details and to apply, go to www.IRMSConference.org.uk/Bursaries.

And spread the word - we want these bursaries to be available to the widest possible audience, so please share with friends, colleagues and contacts.

Thank you, and good luck! Joe
Joe Chapman IRMS Conference Director

Best Regards,
Ren

Reynold Leming
Managing Director
reynold AT informu-solutions.com
https://www.informu-solutions.com/


My source: Records Management List - Archive
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=RECORDS-MANAGEMENT-UK

Thursday, February 22, 2024

AI in the Creative Industries: An Interdisciplinary Conference [One week left!]

[reposting as there's just over one week left to submit abstracts for our summer conference on AI]

AI in the Creative Industries: An Interdisciplinary Conference [EXTENDED DEADLINE]

7th June 2024 - Hosted by Futureworks, Manchester UK

Artificial Intelligence has advanced extremely rapidly over the past months. Responses have been polarized; with some predicting the end of the world and others celebrating a technology with the potential to create a new industrial revolution. The biggest difference between these new algorithmic technologies and those that preceded them are the potential for new AI models to generate creative content. Visual art, photography, literature and digital scripting have been produced by AI, to varying levels of success. To the existing debates around AI (questions of ethics, consciousness, or cyborg theory, for example) have arisen new problems regarding the role of art and the artist in the age, not of mechanical reproduction, but mechanical production. Can a robot be creative?

This conference aims to bring together researchers from across media studies, music and sound, the visual arts, video games, film and TV, animation, sociology, history, literature, politics, philosophy and aesthetic theory, to interrogate the growing role of AI in the creative industries, its potentials (both negative and positive), and how we are to react to the rise of AI as both tool and creator.

Abstracts for 20-minute papers are welcomed on subjects including, but not limited to:
  • AI creativity: is it truly creative?
  • AI and transhumanism
  • AI and the question of consciousness
  • Copyright law and artificial intelligence
  • Utilization of AI as a creative tool
  • The depiction of AI in creative media
  • The ethics of AI usage and its potential to help or harm
  • The aesthetics of artificial intelligence
Please submit 250 word abstracts with accompanying 50-word bio and 5 keywords to organizer joe.darlington AT futureworks.ac.uk by 29th February 2024. 

Submissions are encouraged from academics, postgraduate researchers and non-academic speakers alike. Creative practitioners are also welcome, as are those working in the production or utilization of AI.

<>

This message was issued to members of www.jiscmail.ac.uk/AI-SGES, a mailing list hosted by www.jiscmail.ac.uk, terms & conditions are available at https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/

Monday, November 06, 2023

DATA POWER 2024


"Exciting news: 
The fifth #DataPower Conference will take place from 4th to 6th September '24 - in Bangalore (India), Graz (Austria) and online.

Conference theme: Situating Data Practices Beyond Data Universalism.
Deadline: 19th Jan '24"

https://datapowerconference.org/data-power-2024/about-2024

INDIVIDUAL
|
     INTERPERSONAL    :     SCIENCES               
HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
|
GROUP
data, AI anxiety
psychological security
my privacy
knowledge
what, how we know
emotional well-being
literacies
DATA

numeric - quantified
physical access/security
surveillance
freedomS
machine
algorithmic
humanity
social - society
cultural life
civil society
wisdom
data-related PRACTICES
how to envisage a just data society?
inequality - discrimination
control
governments
security agencies
economics - politics
citizenship
rights - injustices
private corporations
political security

POWER


  My source:
https://x.com/juliane_jarke/status/1720118890234106296?s=20

Wednesday, October 04, 2023

Two abstracts for 2024 inc. Philosophy at Play Conference

This month, in addition to an abstract for:

MYTH, RITUAL AND PRACTICE FOR THE AGE OF ECOLOGICAL CATASTROPHE


- there is an invitation to submit a paper abstract for:




The sixth Philosophy at Play Conference will be hosted by the Faculty of Education at the Complutense University in Madrid on June 3-5, 2024




No one likes to waste time^, but whether or not these abstracts are accepted, the thought and effort will extend my thinking and application of Hodges' model. Beyond initial thoughts below, I need to check on the key issues in the philosophy of play:

INDIVIDUAL
|
     INTERPERSONAL    :     SCIENCES               
HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
|
GROUP

play therapy (distraction ...)

being outdoors:
psychological impact of green
symbolic play
mental games - play

intellectual skill, creativity
imagination in play

individual play child - verbalisation

cognitive and character development - morality, personal ethics
'illness' norms - anhedonic
addictive quality of gaming
role of advertising

play theology - utopia

play senses, kinaesthetics, embodiment
accessibility
information at play: uncertainty, bluff, prediction - movement, strategy
functional play - toys/objects
activities - performance

space: arena, field, theatre

games / sport - physical contest
gaming as work / effort / energy
gaming as tech/software
simulation
gaming 'in' Virtual Reality
(tech's role in disrupting (idealised?) play?
Games/Gaming as rules/process

quantitative research - evidence

social inclusion/exclusion

sociology of play (and in arts)

socialisation

language: "= playing field"
role play :: fancy dress

socio-cultural dimensions - history
traditional play/games

social behaviour, status, participation

turn-taking, stigma (cheating)

sports etiqette, 'fair play'

team games (team building - work)

Serres - Myth, History
Harlequin - mischief
politics of play studies: oppression, marginalisation, erasure, vulnerable groups, exploitation*

'export' of games
hegenomy, hierarchies
software colonialism (Africa)**
debates: guns in play, weapons,
'shoot em up'
FROM: child's-play
TO: gamesmanship
whose rules, control of space?

governance & politics of play

economies of play
'A nation at play'

media - controls -
consumerism, advertising
gambling
THEOLOGY


*An example - previously:

^Since posting: I realise that 'neutrality' in play (studies) and the call here appears an important concept. Clinically, Hodges' model can literally reflect unconditional positive regard, as a template the model provides a 'blank slate'; as long as we are being authentic and not 'playing games'.

In terms of this conference, can Hodges' model act as a referee - by providing a neutral space? It would appear so, but this is quickly challenged - if not illusory.

That neutrality is lost in the blink of an eye - shattered even, by a twist, a step of a foot. A shift from the nexus, center of the model - the neutrality is comprised. All of a sudden the observer is forced to play. Or at least there is an invitation to contextualize; psychologically, physically, socially, politically or spiritually.

A game to play in itself?

**c/o Bytes for All mailing list:
"Software colonialism is killing Africa" - Neville Roy Singham  

BBC - Software Development in Africa

Saturday, September 23, 2023

MYTH, RITUAL AND PRACTICE FOR THE AGE OF ECOLOGICAL CATASTROPHE

Fabrice Monteiro, a garbage spirit, from his series
The Prophecy (2017)

The European Forum for the Study of Religion and the Environment

- is pleased to announce its
seventh international conference

Friday May 17 to Sunday May 19, 2024

Universität Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

MYTH, RITUAL AND PRACTICE
FOR THE AGE OF ECOLOGICAL CATASTROPHE
 
Click here for the Call for Papers and Conference Description:

https://www.religion-environment.com/conference/open-call-for-papers

Proposals will be accepted until 31 October, 2023

This conference will explore the many questions that arise from the apparent continuing philosophical-scientific indigestibility of mythology, ritual and practice. What does or would gaia-logical mythology, ritual or practice look like? Are they, could they be more pedagogically effective with non-experts than analysis and critique? Is the solution to ecological alienation the same as the age-old solutions to spiritual alienation? Is ecological alienation parallel to the emic/etic divide in ethnography? Is “practice” the way “in”? Is “belief”? Does gaiaism demand rituals and practices? Are contemporary scholarly analyses (Haraway, Latour, Stengers, Mary-Jane Rubenstein’s pantheologies, Sloterdijk, etc.) today’s form of ecological myth? Is myth, with its associations with the archaic (despite the work of Cassirer, Barthes and others), a fitting genre for today? (Many traditional myths are hardly gaian.) Must gaian myth, rituals or practices be atheological (i.e., is theology, as some argue, inherently not deep-ecological)? Does subtractive theology (à la Badiou) better lend itself to legitimate gaian mythology? Do ecotheologies written out of specific continuing pre-modern cultural-religious traditions that are not entirely or comfortably gaian satisfactorily bridge the spaces between emic and etic genres/approaches and satisfy calls for new gaia-ologies? Is there a meaningful difference between the myths of “major religions” and “indigenous” cultures? How do or might “old” and “new” cultural material relate to one another? Must scholars-scientists, environmentalists or artists use only material from “their own” heritages in producing gaia-ologies? Are there bases for and modes of considering or evaluating the skill or usefulness of gaia-ologies, gaian myths, rituals or practices? How have religious or spiritual environmentalists created gaian myths, rituals or practices? How might they? What artists, artistic works or modalities or works of popular culture stand as noteworthy examples?

Conference Chair: Jonathan Schorsch jschorsch AT uni-potsdam.de

We will be most grateful if you could circulate this through your networks.

Kind regards,
Jonathan Schorsch
-- 
Professur, Jüdische Religions- und Geistesgeschichte
Institut für Jüdische Theologie
Universität Potsdam
  jschorsch AT uni-potsdam.de
  +49 (0)331 977 1744

Founder and Director
Jewish Activism Summer School
  www.jassberlin.org

Founder and Director
The Green Sabbath Project
  www.greensabbathproject.net


My source:

Philos-L "The Liverpool List". Department of Philosophy, University of Liverpool https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/philosophy/philos-l/
https://www.facebook.com/PhilosL/
@PhilosL @LiverpoolPhilos

Image: c/o https://www.fabricemonteiro.com/

I am planning to submit an abstract, to develop further ideas encountered and contributed at SOPHERE.

Friday, August 18, 2023

23rd UKSS International Conference: Systems: Transition to a Sustainable World

Systems: Transition to a Sustainable World

15th of September 2023 in the Richmond Building, University of Portsmouth

The Conference programme for the 15th of September is as follows: UKSS 2023 Conference programme Friday the 15th of September Time Activity 10.00 – 10.30 a.m. Arrival and registration, Reception, The Richmond Building 10.30 – 10.45 a.m. Welcome by the UKSS President, Professor Stowell, Room 201 10.45 – 11.45 p.m. Keynote presentation, Ray Ison, Read More …

I thought I had posted this news, but it seems not. I'm pleased to do so now and have only recently  booked. As above, the conference is for one day and costs £25.00 while free for UKSS members, which will make you a UKSS member if not already. You can attend in-person or virtually.

As per 2018 when I presented Hodges' model in Portsmouth, I plan to attend physically, visiting Oxford on the way down.

Friday, August 04, 2023

Recognition of Nursing's contribution to life quality of patients

"Maria Isabel Razquin, Director of the University where all the pre and post registration nursing education is undertaken and the medical staff trained, gave a key note speech. ... She spoke of the conceptual discipline in nursing, and of how the market economy was affecting health services. This theme was extended into world health information and the storage of data; the development of nursing informatics and how nursing practice should lead to validating and developing minimum datasets using an understandable language. She then alluded to NANDA and the 4 thesaurus' which holds medical and nursing terms that can be cross referenced with new information and knowledge. All the terms we commonly use in the UK were mentioned: multi-disciplinary, updated, accurate, efficient and research and knowledge based.

She went on to say that it has been difficult to quantify the life quality of a patient; it has been tried and it has failed, not showing the significance of nursing. Conceptualisation is a foundation for nursing and it was suggested it could be used with research, with the scientific focus and practical sources being the future body of knowledge. Nurses, she said, should have a clear identity of the care given in multidisciplinary teams, while combining facts and data with nurse training, recognised nursing disciplines and leaders of research would enable competence in complicated fields. Skilful and relevant collection of data, she concluded, would facilitate education and change management training for encompassing computerising with conceptualisation." p.19. 


Sampson, H.E. (2000). International Symposium of Nursing Diagnosis - Pamplona, Spain - May 2000. ITIN, British Computer Society, Nursing Specialist Group. Volume 12: Issue 3. Sept. 2000. pp.19-21. ISSN 0956-5159.

NANDA - https://nanda.org/

ITIN - Information Technology in Nursing

An 'updated' title(?):

"Recognition of Nursing's contribution to Sustain and Enhance the People's Life Chances."

Monday, July 10, 2023

5th Multidisciplinary International Symposium on Disinformation in Open Online Media


Call for Contributions

The Multidisciplinary International Symposium on Disinformation in Open Online Media (MISDOOM) is returning for its 5th edition on 21 and 22 November 2023. This time, the conference will be hosted by the National Research Center for Mathematics and Computer Science (CWI) at Amsterdam Science Park (Netherlands). MISDOOM values multidisciplinary research and is designed to be inclusive of different academic disciplines and practices.

The symposium provides a platform for researchers, industry professionals, and practitioners from various disciplines such as communication science, computer science, computational social science, political science, psychology, journalism, and media studies to come together and share their knowledge and insights on online disinformation.

My source - ERCIM NEWS posted previously:

https://hodges-model.blogspot.com/2023/07/ercim-news-134-xai.html

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Design with People in Mind Books - The Seclusion Issue

Design with People in Mind
The Seclusion Issue


Design with People in Mind is the Design in Mental Health Network’s annual round up of the latest research evidence on therapeutic outcomes and the evidence for them relating to the built environment in mental health. In partnership with London Southbank University and Nottingham Trent, so far we’ve looked at a variety of issues, from nature to sound design to boundaries and borders. The latest issue is Seclusion, launched at this years conference and focusing on the evidence for and impact of the practice of seclusion units, how to use them if at all, and best practice in the field to maintain psychological as well as physical safety for service users and staff.



The link to the publication is: 

https://dimhn.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1DWPIM_I8_250x210_24PP_AW_V02_HI_RES.pdf

It’s a member only resource, so you will need to register (free for individuals) before viewing.

Very best,

Hannah

Hannah Chamberlain
CEO
Design in Mental Health Network
m: 07811169609
www.dimhn.org


My source: https://twitter.com/DIMHN

See also:
ii Design with People in Mind

Sunday, April 16, 2023

Artificial Intelligence and Data Science for Society and the Public Good: Technologies, Applications, and Governance

Dear CHAIN member,

CHAIN member Laura Brookes would like to draw your attention to the following free event.
Please pass on as appropriate. Thank you.

Artificial Intelligence and Data Science for Society and the Public Good:

Technologies, Applications, and Governance

2nd May 2023 - 3rd May 2023
Wivenhoe House Hotel

University of Essex, Park Road, Wivenhoe, Colchester, Essex, CO4 3SQ

Book your tickets now

Join us as we bring together the brightest minds in data science and AI to showcase the power of data in action for public good and business applications.

Two days of fascinating talks at the prestigious Wivenhoe House Hotel will include interactive workshops, case study presentations to share best practice and an opportunity to form new partnerships across academia, the public sector and industry for more high-impact projects moving forward.

This workshop aims to explore the development and deployment of AI and data science methods in government and the wider public sector, but also businesses and charities. This includes the use of such methods to support the development and implementation of policy and delivering improved services to citizens at the regional and national level, whilst we simultaneously tackle global challenges and the delivery of the sustainable development goals (SDGs).

This workshop is for those inspired to make a difference and for those ready to embrace the revolutionising potential of data science and AI to improve society for all. A cross/interdisciplinary workshop, this event is aimed at researchers, policymakers, practitioners and professionals already working in or interested in exploring this area.

Further information

Complimentary refreshments will be available on both workshop days including a networking lunch.

Guests are welcome to use the free onsite parking for the workshop. Delegates are also eligible for discounts on accommodation at the Wivenhoe House Hotel should they wish to stay overnight. To receive your discount code please contact me directly.

Further information about the event and full agenda can be found on Eventbrite:

https://AIandDataScienceforPublicGood.eventbrite.co.uk


We hope you can join us for this exciting workshop. Please feel free to contact if you wish to discuss any aspect further.

Equally, you are welcome to share this invitation with colleagues and those within your network. ‘

Laura Brookes

Outreach and Publicity Officer
ESRC Business and Local Government Data Research Centre

M: +44 (0) 07828617415
E: Laura.brookes AT essex.ac.uk

W: www.blgdataresearch.org
Twitter: @blgdataresearch
LinkedIn

Regards,

Wendy Zhou
CHAIN Manager

If you wish to publicise information on the CHAIN Network please email your request to: enquiries AT chain-network.org.uk

CHAIN - Contact, Help, Advice and Information Network – is an online international network for people working in health and social care. For more information on CHAIN and joining the network please visit website: www.chain-network.org.uk

Follow CHAIN on Twitter: @CHAIN_Network ; Connect with CHAIN on LinkedIn

[ Planning to attend, spending the 1st May in Cambridge. PJ ].

Saturday, February 11, 2023

2023 Improving University Teaching - Hybrid Conference: Sustaining Academic Resilience

 I received news this morning that I will be presenting virtually at:

"Students may arrive at university without a clear sense of what to do now that their goal of admission has been attained. To them, reaching that goal feels like a significant achievement—and it is. But finding a purpose—their own purpose—for pursuing university studies beyond admission is clearly a key ingredient for their academic and personal success.  Without it, they risk not having the resilience needed to cope with novelty and failure. With faculty support, however, students can develop a personal sense of direction to both guide and inspire them as they learn. A corollary is that emotional investment in their studies will help determine their success just as much as intellectual gifts and academic preparation.

Two years ago, the IUT conference was organized around the theme of “the human side of teaching.” This year we return to some of these same issues, which have become if anything more important in the light of our experience during the pandemic. We have seen how students who engage in remote learning often miss the support of direct contact with peers and academic staff and must compensate with added commitment of their own. We have also seen how teachers and students can become stressed to the point that wellbeing becomes an urgent issue for both. How can their wellbeing be nurtured? How can we sustain academic resilience?"

More details ...

 
Looking forward to join, learn and share:

"Hodges' model: Insights into Sustainability & Resilience"


Thursday, January 26, 2023

Edge(s) Computing ... IEEE EDGE 2023

IEEE EDGE 2023 - CALL FOR PAPERS

c/o AI-SGES list

 

“It’s the edges of the maps that fascinate ...”
David Mitchell, The Bone Clocks
[Goodreads.com]


 INDIVIDUAL
|
 INTERPERSONAL    :     SCIENCES               
HUMANISTIC --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC   
SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
|
GROUP
'domains'

"Edge computing, as the convergence of computing and communications executed close to data collection and places of storage and application, provides a paradigm that offers several research and application opportunities across a wide range of domains." ... [IEEE EDGE 2023] ...

'domains'
'domains'




 

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

CfP: '(Responsible) Standardisation for (the Digital) Society'

Session at STS Conference Graz

Folks,

The deadline for this CfP is approaching (30 January). 
We only ask for an abstract of about 500 words. 
 

The abstract should be submitted via
(you will first need to log-in or register).

Thematic Fields
The conference will be held on 8 - 10 May, in Graz (Austria). 
 
For further information about the event please visit https://stsconf.tugraz.at/

Hope to see many of you there.

Cheers,
Kai.
_________

Kai Jakobs

RWTH Aachen University
Computer Science Department
Informatik 4 (Communication and Distributed Systems)
Ahornstr. 55, D-52074 Aachen, Germany
Kai.Jakobs AT comsys.rwth-aachen.de

EURAS - The European Academy for Standardisation.

My source:
This message was issued to members of www.jiscmail.ac.uk/SOCIOTECH, a mailing list hosted by www.jiscmail.ac.uk

Saturday, December 31, 2022

CFP: History of the Philosophy of Pregnancy

Conference Venue:

Department of Philosophy, University of Dayton, Dayton, United States

Details

CFA: History of the Philosophy of Pregnancy

We invite authors to submit abstracts of approximately 500 words for a conference entitled “History of the Philosophy of Pregnancy,” hosted by the Philosophy Department of the University of Dayton, as part of its Richard R. Baker colloquia series (Dayton, OH, USA). The conference will be  held on October 6-7th, 2023. Please see below for details. 

Keynote Speaker 

Sara Brill (Fairfield University) 

Our conference is motivated by the dearth of historical scholarship on the philosophy of pregnancy. Historical scholarship on reproduction tends to focus on the conception and development of the embryo  -- 'generation' and 'embryology' -- treating the developing organism as an independent entity. As a consequence, pregnancy is written out of the causal story. The goal of this conference is to recover a history of the philosophy of pregnancy and bring the work and challenges of the pregnant individual into focus.

We encourage submissions pertaining to all historical periods and are interested in approaches to the topic from different philosophical schools and cultural perspectives.

Examples of potential topics include the following:

  • How was pregnancy conceptualized across cultures and time?
  • How did commitments to autochthony shape conceptions of pregnancy and public policy?
  • What were the political ramifications associated with conceptions of pregnancy, miscarriage, fertility, and infertility?
  • How did slavery and colonial practices impact conceptions of pregnancy and birth?
  • How did historical discussions of individuality and individuation take pregnancy into account in the context of discussions of generation?
  • How did the practices of midwifery or obstetrics inform philosophical discussions of reproduction?
  • How has pregnancy been understood in the history of biology?
  • How was the role of the placenta in reproduction understood?
  • How was pregnancy understood across species? What significance did this have for understandings of human and non-human animals?
  • What impacts were maternal agency or mental life thought to have on  pregnancy?
  • How did pregnancy relate to ensoulment and the formation of persons?
  • How was the female reproductive body conceived relative to the male reproductive body? Were female bodies treated as inferior versions of male bodies or unique for their reproductive capacities?
  • What is the historical relation of sex or gender to pregnancy? What is the relation of physiological to cultural understandings of pregnancy, or vice versa?
  • How has the discourse on pregnancy and fertility intersected with the discourse on ableism and disability?
  • Why is there little, if any, explicitly philosophical writing on pregnancy in the history of philosophy?
  • What kinds of methods may be employed for the recovery of a history of the philosophy of pregnancy?
  • What does the history of the philosophy of pregnancy suggest for contemporary philosophy of pregnancy?

Please submit abstracts of ~500 words to histphilpregnancy AT gmail.com by May 15, 2023. Please include your name, institutional affiliation (if any), and paper title in your email. Papers should be suitable for a 30 minute talk, with Q&A to follow. Acceptance decisions will be announced by July 1, 2023. Submissions from members of underrepresented groups in philosophy are especially encouraged. Subsidized accommodations are available on a limited basis. 

Please contact histphilpregnancy AT gmail.com with any questions.

Organized by Dr. Myrna Gabbe (University of Dayton), Maja Sidzińska (PhD candidate, University of Pennsylvania), and Evangelian Collings (PhD candidate, University of Pittsburgh)

Sponsored by Philosophy Department, University of Dayton

My source: (once again)
Philos-L "The Liverpool List" https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/philosophy/philos-l/
Twitter @PhilosL. Department of Philosophy @LiverpoolPhi

n.b. I'm not sure about the motivation for recent posts, but the children have lost two grandmothers in the past two months.