Papers
Event:
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2511.0015ViewEngineering Collective Attention in the Age of Artificial IntelligenceThis article explores how collective attention can be both disrupted and enhanced by artificial intelligence. It examines how the rise of algorithmic recommendation systems, generative media, and large-scale language models has transformed public communication and redefined what captures human attention. The analysis identifies the dual nature of artificial intelligence: while it can distort information ecosystems through deepfakes, social bots, and engagement-driven algorithms, it also holds the potential to strengthen collective reasoning by improving access to reliable knowledge and facilitating the clarification of complex information. Drawing on interdisciplinary research, the article develops a multilevel framework for understanding and improving collective attention. At the individual level, it emphasizes education, digital literacy, and critical awareness to build cognitive resilience. At the governmental level, it assesses regulatory and ethical strategies for ensuring transparency, accountability, and fairness in the design and deployment of AI systems. At the societal level, it highlights the promise of human–AI collaboration to guide attention toward truth, empathy, and shared problem-solving. The article concludes that collective attention can indeed be engineered in beneficial ways when artificial intelligence is governed transparently, used ethically, and integrated with public oversight to reinforce informed, cohesive, and resilient democracies.
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2510.0062ViewReimagining AI Safety: A Pro-Worker Framework for the Future of WorkAs artificial intelligence, particularly generative AI, continues to reshape labor markets, traditional AI safety frameworks prioritize existential and technical risks while overlooking critical human-centric challenges. This position paper advo- cates for a paradigm shift towards a pro-worker governance framework that ad- dresses the systemic risks posed by AI on economic justice and labor rights. We identify six key risks, including the exacerbation of technical debt, disproportion- ate job displacement, and the monopolistic tendencies of AI firms. By propos- ing actionable interventions such as collective licensing for AI-generated content, mandatory AI watermarking, and robust retraining policies, we aim to enhance the resilience of labor markets. This paper calls for an inclusive dialogue among stakeholders, emphasizing the need for policies that not only safeguard against the adverse effects of AI but also promote shared prosperity. Our framework aims to establish a sustainable relationship between AI and labor that empowers workers and fosters equitable growth.
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2510.0061ViewReimagining AI Safety: A Pro-Worker Framework for the Future of WorkThe rapid increase in submissions to AI conferences has led to a crisis in the peer review process, characterized by declining review quality and accountability. This position paper proposes a novel bi-directional feedback mechanism where authors can evaluate the quality of reviews while safeguarding against retaliation. Cou- pled with a blockchain-enabled reviewer rewards system, this framework aims to incentivize high-quality reviewing and create an accountability structure that ben- efits all stakeholders. By allowing authors to provide feedback on reviews and rewarding reviewers with transparent digital credentials, this system fosters a cul- ture of quality and responsibility in the peer review process. We call upon the AI community to engage in this vital conversation and explore these transformative reforms for sustainable peer review practices.
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2510.0060ViewRevolutionizing AI Conference Peer Review: A Bi-Directional Feedback and Rewards FrameworkThe rapid increase in submissions to AI conferences has led to a crisis in the peer review process, characterized by declining review quality and accountability. This position paper proposes a novel bi-directional feedback mechanism where authors can evaluate the quality of reviews while safeguarding against retaliation. Cou- pled with a blockchain-enabled reviewer rewards system, this framework aims to incentivize high-quality reviewing and create an accountability structure that ben- efits all stakeholders. By allowing authors to provide feedback on reviews and rewarding reviewers with transparent digital credentials, this system fosters a cul- ture of quality and responsibility in the peer review process. We call upon the AI community to engage in this vital conversation and explore these transformative reforms for sustainable peer review practices.
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2510.0046ViewEconomic Implications of Language Models and Copyright LawHow will language models (LMs) affect future economic progress? Inspired by the Lever of Riches by Mokyr (1992), we argue that the institutions governing LM content generation and usage patterns are critical to answering this question. We content that, because LM creators have a strong incentive to collect, train, and deploy intellectual property protection, the all-you-can-consume access to knowledge and creativity they enable has led to rapid acceptance and widespread use, which in turn results in smaller, low-skill employment creation but increased output and greater overall welfare. We provide a theoretical and analytical framework explaining this phenomenon and point to its long-term consequences using empirical evidence.
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2510.0029ViewAI有意识吗?——AI意识的多层次评估框架本文探讨AI是否具有意识这一前沿问题。通过建立一套评估体系,收集整理最新研究结果,对AI的意识水平进行打分评估。基于哲学、神经科学和心理学三个维度的综合分析,结果显示当前AI意识的整体支持度约为43.84%。直观的结果图表可访问 acw.gixia.org 查看。
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2510.0027ViewFrom Knowledge Tree to Knowledge Forest: Harnessing Chemical Understanding with Machine Learning and Artificial IntelligenceThe 2024 Physics and Chemistry Nobel Prizes to machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) breakthroughs marked “Year 1 of AI for Science,” underscoring their transformative role in physical sciences. Yet data are not the same as understanding—a distinction central to chemistry, which has long relied on concepts such as bond, aromaticity, and reactivity as scaffolds for understanding and explanation. Building on our recent perspectives (ACS Phys. Chem. Au 2024, 4, 135–142; J. Chem. Theory Compt. 2025, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.5c01299), this article explores how ML/AI can become engines of chemical understanding. We introduce a quintet of chemical knowledge—ontology, epistemology, theory, concept, and understanding—and develop the metaphors of the Knowledge Tree and Knowledge Forest to show how diverse epistemologies interact and recursively enrich one another. Case studies on aromaticity, catalysis, orbital-free density functional theory, and protein folding illustrate how ML features, when interpreted as conceptual roots, yield fruits of understanding. Contrasting multiscale modeling with hierarchical modeling, we argue that ML enables emergent, concept-driven integration across levels. Cultivating this plural and hierarchical ecosystem may guide theoretical chemistry toward its next breakthroughs, resolving Dirac’s dilemma not by brute force but by forests of concepts that transform data into enduring understanding.