Courses and Public Lectures by Our Guest Professors in 2023
Join the courses and public lectures held by this year’s renowned guest professors of our doctoral colleges and the TU Wien Informatics Doctoral School.
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International collaboration is at the heart of TU Wien Informatics Doctoral School. Every year, we host guest professors from around the world. Here’s a snapshot of the public lectures and courses by our guests in 2023.
Public Lectures
These lectures are open to everyone and are part of our Current Trends in Computer Science lecture series.
Winter Semester
- October 12, 2023 // Optional Type Systems: Current Approaches and Ongoing Efforts by Werner Dietl (University of Waterloo, Cananda)
Summer Semester
- May 4, 2023 // Research-Based Teaching Ethics to Engineering Students by Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic (Mälardalen University and Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)
- May 11, 2023 // This will not be Tidy: Planet-Centric Design and finding Socio-Technical Alternatives by Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK)
- May 12, 2023 // A Counter-History of Artificial Intelligence: Computing factories and machinery (18th-21st century) by Antonio A.Casilli (Polytechnic Institute of Paris, France) This lecture is part of the CAIML Symposium on “The Secret Ingredients for Improving Artificial Intelligence”
- June 7, 2023 // Responsible AI by Ricardo Baeza-Yates (Northeastern University, USA)
- June 13, 2023 // Explaining a Representation requires Representing Explanations by Pedro Cabalar (University of A Coruña, Spain)
Courses
To enroll in these courses as a student, simply register for them on TISS.
Winter Semester
- Program Analysis by Werner Dietl (University of Waterloo, Cananda)
- Democracy in the Digital Era by George Metakides (Digital Enlightenment Forum, Netherlands)
Summer Semester
- Eight Lessons on Ethical AI by Antonio A.Casilli (Polytechnic Institute of Paris, France)
- Digital Ethics and the Connected World by Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic (Mälardalen University and Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)
- Designing Differently, Imagining Collaboratively: The Need for Socio-Technical Alternatives by Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK)
- Non-monotonic Extension of Temporal Logic by Pedro Cabalar (University of A Coruña, Spain)
- Introduction to Responsible AI by Ricardo Baeza-Yates (Northeastern University, USA)
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