Információs Társadalom Kutatóintézet

Human-Centric Digitalization and Future of Work

Europe/Budapest
Ludovika Szárnyépület/Földszint-John Lukacs Társalgó (Ludovika Szárnyépület)

Ludovika Szárnyépület/Földszint-John Lukacs Társalgó

Ludovika Szárnyépület

1083 Budapest, 1 Ludovika Square
50
Leírás

 

Digitalization, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Algorithmic Management (AM) are key and increasingly pervasive technologies in the 21st century. It is going to impact the way people live and work in a significant way. AI/AM raises issues of transparency, accountability and fairness. The ‘human control’ principle refers to when automated decisions have to be – under certain conditions –subject to human review. The conference presentations cover two broad issues. Firstly, speakers intend to illustrate the ‘human control’ approach through various – legal, organisational – experiences. Secondly, new jobs are created through digitalisation (e.g. platform work) but a growing number of people find themselves in vulnerable, often non-standard forms of employment. Technology may not have a significant negative impact on the quantity of jobs available to humans. However, digitalisation implies a redistribution of economic value from those with skills that can be substituted by technology to those with skills that can be complemented by technology.

 

8:45 - 9:00 

Welcome: Bernát Török, Director (Institute of the Information Society – Ludovika University of Public Service, Budapest, Hungary)

I. – Responsible Artificial Intelligence: Selected Experiences

Chair: László Kónya, Managing Director, AmCham Board-member-at-large, Deutsche Telekom IT Solutions

9:00 – 9:25

Tamás Fézer (University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary) “Upside Down: Liability, Risk Allocation and Artificial Intelligence”

9:25 - 9:50

Sina Ardabili (University of Mohaghegh Ardabili Ardabil, Iran, Amir Mosavi, Óbuda University, Hungary, Csaba Makó, Ludovika University of Public Service, Miklós Illéssy, HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest, Hungary) "Job Quality, Digitalization and Innovation (Application and Advenced Machine Learning Analysis)"

 

9:50 – 11:15

Zsolt Ződi (Institue of Information Society, Ludovika University of Public Service, Budapest, Hungary) The Variety of Platform Work Experience and Its Legal Theory Foundation”

 

11:15 - 11:40

Lovleen Chadha (Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, Indian BS in Data Science and Appliations, 2022-2026) "Large Language Models - "goodness - of - fit" for Business Tasks"

11:40 - 12:00              Q & A and Summary of the Chair   

12:10 – 12:25                         Coffee Break

II. New Models of Work with Special Focus on the Legal Regulation: Platform Labour and Hybrid Work

Chair: József Pap, Nokia Solutions and Networks

Head of Excellence and Process Management - CNS Supply Chain

 

12:25 – 12:50

Chris Warhurst (Warwick University, Institute of Employment Research, IER, UK) "Putting humans at the centre of the future of work: the challenges and opportunities with Industry 5.0"

12:50 – 13:50                            Lunch

13:50 – 14:15

Tuomo Alasoini (Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Helsinki, Finland) "Digital tools usage groups as features of the digital divide between Finnish employees"

14:15 – 14:40 

Branka Andjelkovic (Public Policy Research Centre, Belgrade, Serbia) Right Before Your Eyes, Yet Unnoticed: The Growth of Online Labour and Country Differences in Southeast Europe”

14:40 – 15:05

Laura Seppanen (Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Helsinki, Finland) "The consequences of (in) visibility for platform workers"

15:05 – 15:30

Matti Vartiainen (Department of Engineering and Management, Aalto University, Helsinki, Finland) “Design and Implementation of Hybrid Work"

15:30 – 15:55     Q & A and Summary of the Chair

15:55 -16:20

Concluding remarks – Csaba Makó (Institute of the Information Society - Ludovika University of Public Service, Budapest, Hungary)

Szervező

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