A new research agenda for African generative AI
Nat Hum Behav
.
2023 Nov;7(11):1839-1841.
doi: 10.1038/s41562-023-01735-1.
Authors
Rachel Adams
1
2
3
,
Ayantola Alayande
4
,
Zameer Brey
5
,
Brantley Browning
5
,
Michael Gastrow
6
,
Jerry John Kponyo
7
,
Dona Mathew
8
,
Moremi Nkosi
9
,
Henry Nunoo-Mensah
7
,
Diana Nyakundi
9
,
Victor Odumuyiwa
10
,
Olubunmi Okunowo
5
,
Philipp Olbrich
11
,
Nawal Omar
9
,
Kemi Omotubora
10
,
Paul Plantinga
6
,
Gabriella Razzano
12
,
Zara Schroeder
9
,
Andrew Selasi Agbemenu
7
,
Araba Sey
9
,
Kristophina Shilongo
13
,
Shreya Shirude
5
,
Matthew Smith
14
,
Eric Tutu Tchao
5
,
Davy K Uwizera
15
Affiliations
1
Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa. radams@researchictafrica.net.
2
Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. radams@researchictafrica.net.
3
Information Law and Policy Centre, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London, London, UK. radams@researchictafrica.net.
4
Bennett Institute for Public Policy, Department of Politics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
5
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Johannesburg, South Africa.
6
Human Sciences Research Council, Pretoria, South Africa.
7
Responsible Artificial Intelligence Lab, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
8
Digital Futures Lab, Panaji, India.
9
Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa.
10
University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria.
11
8 GIZ, FAIR Forward - Artificial Intelligence for All, Bonn, Germany.
12
OpenUp, Cape Town, South Africa.
13
Mozilla Foundation, San Francisco, CA, USA.
14
International Development Research Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
15
Huzalabs, Kigali, Rwanda.
PMID:
37803130
DOI:
10.1038/s41562-023-01735-1
No abstract available