169,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Erscheint vorauss. 11. März 2026
Melden Sie sich für den Produktalarm an, um über die Verfügbarkeit des Produkts informiert zu werden.

payback
85 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

In Using Psychoanalysis to Understand and Address AI Bias: Refractions in the Digital Mirror, Karyne E. Messina uses a psychoanalytic lens to explore the subconscious forces driving AI development. This book provides a unique psychoanalytic framework for understanding how AI systems internalize and amplify the unconscious biases of their human creators. Through detailed case studies in clinical healthcare, predictive policing, and automated hiring, Messina introduces concepts such as projection, splitting, and projective identification. She illustrates how these psychological mechanisms -…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In Using Psychoanalysis to Understand and Address AI Bias: Refractions in the Digital Mirror, Karyne E. Messina uses a psychoanalytic lens to explore the subconscious forces driving AI development. This book provides a unique psychoanalytic framework for understanding how AI systems internalize and amplify the unconscious biases of their human creators. Through detailed case studies in clinical healthcare, predictive policing, and automated hiring, Messina introduces concepts such as projection, splitting, and projective identification. She illustrates how these psychological mechanisms - originally developed to explain human behavior - are inadvertently built into the logic of AI, creating systems that replicate societal inequities on a massive scale. Using Psychoanalysis to Understand and Address AI Bias will be of interest to all readers interested in how AI can benefit from psychoanalytic insight, including psychoanalysts in practice and in training, and academics and scholars of AI ethics and technology policy.
Autorenporträt
Karyne E. Messina, FABP, is a psychoanalyst and a training analyst at the Washington Baltimore Center for Psychoanalysis, Washington, DC. She is a member of the medical staff at Johns Hopkins Medicine, MD, and serves as the chair of the scholarship and writing section of the Department of Psychoanalytic Education of The American Psychoanalysis Association where she is a founding member of the Council on Artificial Intelligence.