Major EU Project to Investigate Societal Benefits and Risks of AI

A new €3 million EU research project led by University College Dublin (UCD) Centre for Digital Policy will explore the benefits and risks of Artificial Intelligence (AI) from a societal perspective in order to enhance AI capabilities and EU regulatory frameworks.

Commencing in February 2025, the FORSEE (Forging Successful AI Applications for European Economy and Society) project is funded through the Beyond the horizon: A human-friendly deployment of artificial intelligence and related technologies funding call under the Horizon Europe programme.

The project aims to broaden the concept of AI "success" beyond technological and economic efficiency and provide insights that will structurally enhance capacities to anticipate, evaluate and manage the future and long term opportunities and challenges associated with AI.

Led by Dr Elizabeth Farries, Director of UCD Centre for Digital Policy, the consortium includes eight partners from universities, research institutions and think tanks across six European countries. Dr Farries said, "FORSEE seeks to improve our understanding of what "successful AI" actually means in order to enhance regulatory perspectives and approaches. Focusing on sustainability, labour and economic efficiency, gender and engagement with civil society, our research group will offer broadened awareness of the risks and opportunities of AI, based on our grounded research."

Professor Niamh Moore-Cherry, Principal of UCD College of Social Sciences and Law said, "I am delighted that this exciting consortium project led by Dr Elizabeth Farries has been funded. As the development of AI technology accelerates, it is crucial that we gain a better understanding of its economic, societal and ethical implications as well as its technological success. The FORSEE project, bringing international experts together to develop a critical building block for AI policy and regulatory frameworks in Europe, is part of a growing portfolio of research across a range of disciplines in our College focused on AI and data science and we are delighted to be hosting it."

Engaging with institutions, civil society organisations and the broader public, the FORSEE team will discern the current criteria of AI success to highlight potential tensions between existing AI applications and EU priorities, and evaluate impacts on economy and society. The project will also examine the conditions that underpin or restrain success for small and medium enterprises within the EU, in order to equip stakeholders and policymakers with the tools to address future risks and opportunities.

Co-PI Prof Eugenia Siapera, Professor of Digital Technology, Policy and Society and Co-Director of UCD Centre for Digital Policy, said, "In a context of rapid technological developments and regulatory responses, FORSEE aims to develop a strong empirical basis for fair, equitable and sustainable AI governance in dialogue with institutional bodies and societal stakeholders."

Dr Alexandros Minotakis, a Post-Doctoral researcher at UCD Centre for Digital Policy and member of the project team added, "This project will result in concrete recommendations on European policy, complimenting the existing regulatory framework through its interventions."

The consortium brings together a broad range of partners encompassing interdisciplinary expertise across legal and policy analysis, political economy, computational social science, information and communication, media and platforms studies, collaborating with academics from computer science. Participating UCD researchers include Prof Aphra Kerr, Dr Arjumand Younus, Dr James Steinhoff and Dr Pat Brodie.

Consortium partners include UCD (Ireland), Trinity College Dublin (Ireland), Tilburg University (The Netherlands), University Paul Sabatier Toulouse III (France), the WZB Berlin Social Science Centre (Germany), Demos Helsinki (Finland), TASC Europe Studies CLG (Ireland) and the European Digital SME Alliance (Belgium).

Most Popular Now

Almost All Leading AI Chatbots Show Sign…

Almost all leading large language models or "chatbots" show signs of mild cognitive impairment in tests widely used to spot early signs of dementia, finds a study in the Christmas...

New Study Reveals Why Organisations are …

The slow adoption of blockchain technology is partly driven by overhyped promises that often obscure the complex technological, organisational, and environmental challenges, according to research from the University of Surrey...

Emotional Cognition Analysis Enables Nea…

A joint research team from the University of Canberra and Kuwait College of Science and Technology has achieved groundbreaking detection of Parkinson's disease with near-perfect accuracy, simply by analyzing brain...

New Recommendations to Increase Transpar…

Patients will be better able to benefit from innovations in medical artificial intelligence (AI) if a new set of internationally-agreed recommendations are followed. A new set of recommendations published in The...

Digital Health Unveils Draft Programme f…

18 - 19 March 2025, Birmingham, UK. Digital Health has unveiled the draft programme for its Rewired 2025 event which will take place at the NEC in Birmingham in March next...

AI System Helps Doctors Identify Patient…

A new study from Vanderbilt University Medical Center shows that clinical alerts driven by artificial intelligence (AI) can help doctors identify patients at risk for suicide, potentially improving prevention efforts...

Smartphone App can Help Reduce Opioid Us…

Patients with opioid use disorder can reduce their days of opioid use and stay in treatment longer when using a smartphone app as supportive therapy in combination with medication, a...

AI's New Move: Transforming Skin Ca…

Pioneering research has unveiled a powerful new tool in the fight against skin cancer, combining cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) with deep learning to enhance the precision of skin lesion classification...

Leveraging AI to Assist Clinicians with …

Physical examinations are important diagnostic tools that can reveal critical insights into a patient's health, but complex conditions may be overlooked if a clinician lacks specialized training in that area...

AI can Improve Ovarian Cancer Diagnoses

A new international study led by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that AI-based models can outperform human experts at identifying ovarian cancer in ultrasound images. The study is...

New AI Tool Uses Routine Blood Tests to …

Doctors around the world may soon have access to a new tool that could better predict whether individual cancer patients will benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors - a type of...

Major EU Project to Investigate Societal…

A new €3 million EU research project led by University College Dublin (UCD) Centre for Digital Policy will explore the benefits and risks of Artificial Intelligence (AI) from a societal...