Moderation: Ingmar Mundt (Weizenbaum Institute)
- Lea Stöter (Universität Kassel) and Konstantin Lackner (Universität Kassel): „Scientific Rigour at Stake: The Effects of GenAI on HCI Research“ → Abstract
- Wenjuan Gao (Beihang University): „Beyond Tool Use: The WISE Framework for Researchers’ Generative AI Literacy in the Age of Digital Intelligence“ → Abstract
- Linda Nierling (KIT, ITAS), Angelina Sophie Dähms (KIT, ITAS) and Dana Mahr (KIT, ITAS): „Automated Governance in Science? The impact of Generative AI on Epistemic Authority and Responsibility“ → Abstract
- Angelie Kraft (Weizenbaum Institute), Jochen Knaus (Weizenbaum Institute) and Sonja Schimmler (Weizenbaum Institute, Fraunhofer FOKUS, TU Berlin): „Open Science Practices and Epistemic Diversity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence“ → Abstract
- Juni Schindler (University of Zurich): „ICLR 2026 vs. LMMs: Investigating the Role of Generative AI in the Peer Review Process of ICLR 2026“ → Abstract
Moderation: tba
- Sebastian Piraces (Digi Labor): „From DIY to AI: Independent Musicians, Artificial Intelligence, and the Reconfiguration of Cultural Work in Brazil“ → Abstract
- Angela Graf (bidt) and Niina Zuber (bidt): „All Remains the Same While Everything Changes?! Generative AI, Creativity, and Professional Identity in Advertising Agencies“ → Abstract
- Georg von Richthofen (Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society), Sonja Köhne (Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society) and Maja Golf-Papez (University of Sussex): “ Adapting to Generative AI in Creative Work: A Technological Frames Perspective on Creative Advertising“ → Abstract
- Annette Zimmermann (University of Wisconsin-Madison / Weizenbaum Institute / University of Bayreuth): „Win-win Exploitation and Creative Labor“ → Abstract
Moderation: Gabriel Bartl (Weizenbaum Institute)
- Jose Gallegos Quezada (Erasmus University): „A Relational Model of Explainability in Organization“ → Abstract
- Anna Thieser (Columbia University), Jack LaViolette (Columbia University) and Gil Eyal (Columbia University): „AI Safety as a Space between Fields“ → Abstract
- Louis Ravn (University of Amsterdam): „The politics of AI knowledge distillation“ → Abstract
- Stefan Baack (Independent, Der Spiegel, Stanford University), Christo Buschek (DER SPIEGEL) and Maty Bohacek (Stanford University): „The knowledge valued by AI companies: An analysis of benchmarks used to advertise GenAI models“ → Abstract
- Susanne Förster (Paderborn University): „From Task Verification to Capability Claims: A Genealogy of Benchmarking Practices as Epistemic Infrastructure“ → Abstract