Mykola Makhortykh

he/his
Alfred Landecker lecturer
Mykola Makhortykh
Photo credit / Image credit
None

Mykola Makhortykh is an Alfred Landecker lecturer at the Institute of Communication and Media Science, where he studies the impact of algorithmic systems and AI on Holocaust memory transmission. Before it, Mykola worked as postdoctoral researcher on the project “Populist radical-right attitudes and political information behaviour. A longitudinal study of attitude development in high-choice information environments” (University of Bern & University Koblenz-Landau). In his research, Mykola focuses on politics- and history-centred information behaviour in online environments and how it is affected by the information retrieval systems, such as search engines and recommender systems. To achieve this goal, he combines traditional social science methods (e.g., content analysis and focus groups) with novel computational approaches (e.g., deep learning and agent-based testing). His other research interests include trauma and memory studies, armed conflict reporting, disinformation and computational propaganda research, cybersecurity and critical security studies, and bias in information retrieval systems.

Sessions

Lest AI forgets: How foundation models remember the Holocaust and why it is important

Mykola Makhortykh

Summary
AI transforms how history is taught and remembered, but can it capture the ethical complexities of Holocaust memory and prevent its distortion? To answer this question, I will discuss how foundation models deal with information about the Holocaust and how they can be taught to remember genocides.
Common good
Europe
AI
Lightning Box 1
Lightning Talk
English
Conference