>>> Symposium presentations, recordings and other relevant documents are available at the bottom of this page.

Trust and the Governance of Technology

17 February 2022 | 14:00 - 17:00 CET | Online event

Digital technologies have transformed our economies and societies. Governments too have sought to keep pace with emerging technologies, with a rapid growth of digital government services during the COVID pandemic. Despite the many benefits for both governments (e.g. efficiency and tailoring of services) and citizens (e.g. convenience and flexibility), the digital ecosystem also raises unique governance and accountability challenges. In addition, concerns about cybercrime, online disinformation, artificial intelligence and data privacy have significantly undermined public trust. As digital evolutions are accelerating, well-tailored governance structures are essential to (re)build the trust needed to harness the transformative potential of digital technologies for governments and citizens alike.

In this context, the GOVTRUST Centre of Excellence organised its second annual symposium on Thursday 17 February 2021, 14:00-17:00 CET. The theme of the symposium was â€œTrust and the Governance of Technologyâ€. During this symposium, members of the GOVTRUST consortium and guest speakers presented recent work on the topic of trust and technology, identified key learning points, and raised some crucial questions and issues for discussion.

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Programme

>>> Please find the Symposium presentations, related documents and recordings below.

14:00 - 14:10 | Welcome

  • By prof. dr. Karolien Poels (GOVTRUST - research group Media & ICT in Organisations and Society)

14:10 - 14:50 | Keynote by prof. dr. S. Shyam Sundar

  • ​ is James P. Jimirro Professor of Media Effects, co-director of the Media Effects Research Laboratory and director of the Center for Socially Responsible Artificial Intelligence at Penn State. His research investigates social and psychological effects of human-computer interaction (HCI) and computer-mediated communication (CMC) with specific focus on technological elements in digital media, from websites and social media to smartphones and robots. Current research pertains to fake news, chatbots and smart speakers, AI algorithms, online privacy, social media effects, and the strategic use of media and communication technologies for motivating healthy and prosocial human behaviours. In a recent , he identified trust as a key outcome to be considered with the rise of machine agency.

14:50 - 15:40 | Panel 1: Losing Trust in Technology

  • Presentation on "COVID-19 contact tracing technology: what went wrong?" by prof. dr. Michel Walrave (GOVTRUST - research group Media & ICT in Organisations and Society)
  • Presentation on "Managing your health through self-tracking" by prof. dr. , a moral philosopher specialised in computer and machine ethics at Maastricht University
  • Chair: prof. dr. Wouter Van Dooren (GOVTRUST - research group Politics & Public Governance)

15:40 - 16:00 | Break

16:00 - 16:50 | Panel 2: Building Trust in Technology

  • Presentation on "How citizens trust or mistrust governmental AI projects" by dr. Bjorn Kleizen (GOVTRUST - research group Politics & Public Governance)
  • Presentation on "The commodification of trust" by prof. dr.  (Economist and socio-legal researcher at the Institute for Information Law at University of Amsterdam)
  • Chair: prof. dr. Esther van Zimmeren (GOVTRUST - research group Government & Law)

16:50 - 17:00 | Closing

Symposium documents

S. Shyam Sundar - "Psychology of Human vs. Machine Agency in the Age of AI"

  • Keynote presentation | Please see recording of keynote below
  • Article "Rise of Machine Agency: A Framework for ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓÆµing the Psychology of Human–AI Interaction (HAII)" |
  • Article "Machine Heuristic: When We Trust Computers More than Humans with Our Personal Information" |

Michel Walrave - "COVID-19 contact tracing technology: what went wrong?"

  • Symposium presentation | ​
  • Article "Ready or Not for Contact Tracing? Investigating the Adoption Intention of COVID-19 Contact-Tracing Technology Using an Extended Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology Model" 
  • Article "Reasons for Nonuse, Discontinuation of Use, and Acceptance of Additional Functionalities of a COVID-19 Contact Tracing App: Cross-sectional Survey ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓÆµ" 

Katleen Gabriels - "Managing your health through self-tracking" 

  • Symposium presentation | ​
  • Article "Exploring Entertainment Medicine and Professionalization of Self-Care: Interview ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓÆµ Among Doctors on the Potential Effects of Digital Self-Tracking" 
  • Article "Technologies of the self and other: how self-tracking technologies also shape the other" 

Bjorn Kleizen - "How citizens trust or mistrust governmental AI projects"

  • Symposium presentation | ​
  • EU AI HLEG "Ethics Guidelines for Trustworthy AI" | ​

Balázs Bodó - "The commodification of trust"

  • Symposium presentation | â€‹
  • Article "The Commodification of Trust" 
  • Article "Here Be Dragons – Maintaining Trust in the Technologized Public Sector" | 
  • Blog post "The commodification of trust"

Sophie Op de Beeck - "Key takeaways"

  • Citizens' trust in (trust-inducing) technologies | ​

Symposium recordings

Keynote by prof. dr. S. Shyam Sundar

Psychology of Human vs. Machine Agency in the Age of AI

Panel 1 - Losing Trust in Technology

Speakers: Michel Walrave and Katleen Gabriels

Panel 2 - Building Trust in Technology

Speakers: Bjorn Kleizen and Balázs Bodó