Events | Spatial Hour series with Ulrike Klinger: Generative AI, Social Media, and the Super Election Year of 2024

UC Santa Barbara | October 2, 2024

Center for Spatial Studies and Data Science | 12:00 p.m.

As part of her 2024 Thomas Mann Fellowship, communication scientist Ulrike Klinger will give a talk on Elections and the use of Artificial Intelligence at the Center for Spatial Studies and Data Science at UC Santa Barbara.

Publicly available tools like ChatGPT, Dall.E, or Midjourney enable internet users to create texts and images from prompts without programming skills or expert knowledge. They also add to the strategic arsenal of political campaigns, for instance by providing cheap visual content without copyright issues. In an increasingly visual campaign environment on platforms like Instagram or TikTok, politicians and political parties use these images to illustrate their ideologies-and, potentially, to create and spread disinformation.

Like many technologies before, the rise of generative Al is accompanied by fierce public debates along the lines of "glory" and "doom", various dichotomous predictions ranging from existential fears to instrumental concerns. With regards to election campaigns, Al arrives in times of democratic backsliding and an epistemic crisis, feeding into worries about the future of public spheres and citizen's perceptions of a shared reality.

Can the widely available Al tools, in combination with the (so far) almost unregulated distributive power of social media platforms, unleash the perfect storm especially in a year when more than half of the world's population has been called to vote in over 60 elections?

 
 

 

Attendance


By Invitation only


 

Participants

Ulrike Klinger | Image: Hans Hager

Ulrike Klinger is a communication scientist and since 2020 Chair of Digital Democracy and member of the Board of Directors of the European New School of Digital Studies at the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt/Oder. She is an associate researcher at the Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society in Berlin, where she led the research group “News, Campaigns, and the Rationality of Public Discourse” until 2020. She researches digital political communication, technology and power, and the transformation of digital publics.

 

 

 


The talk is organized by UC Santa Barbara.

 

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