8th AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society
www.aies-conference.com
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Abstract Registration Deadline: May 16, 2025 – 11:59 AoE
Submission deadline: May 23, 2025 – 11:59pm AoE
Abstract and Submission website: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aies25
Notification: July 16, 2025
Conference: October 20-22, 2025


Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly pervasive, powerful, and contested. While AI has the potential to empower individuals and improve society, the ethical ramifications of AI systems and their impact on human societies requires deep and urgent reflection. International organizations, governments, universities, corporations, and philanthropists have recognized this need to embark on an interdisciplinary investigation to help chart a course through the new territory enabled by AI. Earlier iterations of this conference and others have seen the first fruits of these calls to action, as programs for research have been set out in many fields relevant to AI, Ethics, and Society.

AIES is convened each year by program co-chairs from Computer Science, Law and Policy, the Social Sciences, Ethics and Philosophy. Our goal is to encourage talented scholars in these and related fields to submit their best work related to morality, law, policy, psychology, the other social sciences, and AI. Papers should be tailored for a multi-disciplinary audience without sacrificing excellence. In addition to the community of scholars who have participated in these discussions from the outset, we want to explicitly welcome disciplinary experts who are newer to this topic, and see ways to break new ground in their own fields by thinking about AI. Recognizing that a multiplicity of perspectives leads to stronger science, the conference organizers actively welcome and encourage people with differing identities, expertise, backgrounds, beliefs, or experiences to participate.

We are interested in any paper that touches on ethical or societal issues of AI technology and crosscuts any of the above fields. The following topics would be of interest, but the list is intended to be illustrative, not exhaustive:

● Trustworthy AI systems
● Governance, regulation, control, safety, and security of AI
● Value alignment and moral decision making
● Interpretability, explainability, and transparency of AI
● Fairness, equity, and equality in AI
● Human-centered AI, human-AI interaction, and human-AI teaming
● Ethical models/frameworks around AI and data
● AI, lawmaking and the judiciary
● AI in public administration, social service provision, and social good
● AI, surveillance, and privacy
● AI, markets and competition
● AI, health, and wellbeing
● AI and creativity, literature and the arts
● AI, democracy and social movements
● Cultural, geopolitical, economic, employment, and other societal impacts of AI
● Environmental costs and climate impacts of AI


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