Keynote by Naja Holten Møller at the Brazilian CSCW conference SBSC 2024 - Simpósio Brasileiro de Sistemas Colaborativos April 30th, 2024

PhD dissertation by Hubert Dariusz Zając successfully defended April 12th, 2024:

It takes a village to raise clinical AI. Towards clinical usefulness of AI in healthcare

Link to dissertation here.

PhD dissertation by Trine Rask Nielsen successfully defended March 4th, 2024:

ENCODING CARE IN CASEWORK: The Role of Data in Asylum Decision-making

Link to dissertation here.

"Teknologi er i høj grad politik, der er med til at forme samfundet" siger lektor, Naja Holten Møller i interview med Danske A-kasser.

Læs interview her.

“Who Cares About Data? Ambivalence, Translation and Attentiveness in Asylum Casework” awarded the 2023 David B. Martin Best Paper Award during ECSCW 2023

Link to the paper by Trine Rask Nielsen, Maria Menendez-Blanco & Naja Holten Møller.

Link to EUSSET interview with Trine Rask Nielsen.

Styrer ChatGPT os - eller styrer vi ChatGPT, og hvad ønsker vi os af vores fremtidige arbejde?

Det er ikke første gang, vi ser, at en teknologi som ChatGPT forandrer måden, vi arbejder på. Naja Holten Møller har sammen med Majken Overgaard tegnet perspektiverne op på Altinget.dk om, hvordan samtidskunsten fungerer som et vigtigt perspektiv i debatten om kunstig intelligens og fremtidens arbejdsmarked. Ved at bringe kunstneren Hannah Totickis værk RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE: (2021) i spil, beskriver de drømmen som informationstidsalderen bragte med sig.

Foto: David Stjernholm.

Artiklen kan læses her.

PhD defence by Asbjørn William Ammitzbøll Flügge

Where the Practice is - a study of humans and machines in public employment services

Tid: 23. maj 2023, kl. 13.00-17.00

Sted: Store auditorium NEXS, Nørre Alle 53, 1. sal over pejsestuen 2100 Copenhagen Ø

For more information click here.

How are individuals applying for asylum configured as credible through different forms of data and documentation in asylum decision-making in Denmark?

Trine Rask Nielsen in an inteview in altinget.dk about the study conducted in collaboration with Naja Holten Møller: Data as a Lens for Understanding what Constitutes Credibility in Asylum Decision-making.

07.02.2023 - 09.02.2023

PhD course: Confronting Data through Design Methods

This course explores different modes of inquiry with data applying design methods. The participants will practice design methods such as speculation with data. Through probing alternative future(s), we seek to outline the possibilities and consequences of datafied society. The focus will be on the implications for researchers working in the fields of Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Participatory Design (PD) & Critical Data Studies, but the course is open to PhD students from all areas of work- and design studies.

Link to more information & enrollment

02.12.2022

Algorithmic systems and their role in society

By: Airi Lampinen & Kristin Kaltenhäuser

Link to blog post

Erstattes kvinder først af AI?

Det spørgsmål dykker journalist Marie Høst og Naja Holten Møller, adjunkt på Datalogisk Institut på Københavns Universitet ned i i et afsnit af IT-BRANCHENs podcast: Blinde Vinkler.

19.04.2021 - 22.04.2021

PhD course: Methodological foundations for researching & designing data-driven technologies responsibly

The goal of the course is that participants get a concrete and practical experience in thinking through the methodological foundations for design & research and gain an overview of the longer debates in research that draws on ethical, participatory and grounded methods – as well as new turns in our methodological approaches. This course explores the methodological foundations for researching & designing data-driven technologies responsibly. The focus will be on the implications of data, algorithms and automation in work and how we can set up our research to take a sensitive approach to technology development. The course is for researchers working in the fields of Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Participatory Design (PD) & Critical Data Studies, but is open to PhD students from all areas of work- and design studies.

Link to more information & enrollment

13.11.2020

How can our design practice allow for the development of algorithmic decision-support systems but not lose sight of democratic and human values?

Naja holten Møller in an inteview in a4arbejdsliv.dk about the study conducted in collaboration with Irina Shklovski and Thomas T. Hildebrandt: Shifting Concepts of Value - Designing Algorithmic Decision-Support Systems for Public Services.  

Link to interview

01.09.2020

Employment consultants’ experiences from working in the digital job center

Asbjørn Ammitzbøll Flügge in an interview with the media Viden På Tværs about the preliminary results of a study done in collaboration with Naja Holten Møller, investigating how employment consultants worked remotely during the first period (March-June) of the COVID-crisis.

Link to interview

19.06.2020

Final_jobnettrace.png

Naja Holten Møller and Trine Rask Nielsen receive award for their fictional self-tracking app for unemployed individuals at this year’s European conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (ECSCW 2020). 

Link to article

26.05.2020

Prof. Irina Shklovski wins DIS Best Paper Award:

‘Pataphysical Software: (Ridiculous) Technological Solutions for Imaginary Problems

Link to article