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DIGHUM 2025: Vienna, Austria
- Ludger Hagedorn

, Ute Schmid
, Susan J. Winter
, Stefan Woltran
:
Digital Humanism - First Interdisciplinary Science and Research Conference, DIGHUM 2025, Vienna, Austria, November 20-21, 2025, Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 16319, Springer 2026, ISBN 978-3-032-11107-4
Digital Humanism Reshaping Computer Science
- William Berglund, Andreas Brännström

:
Heuristic Search and Constraint Verification for Value-Centric Electrification Planning. 3-18 - Lukas Grasmann, Nysret Musliu

:
A System Prototype for Food Sales Forecasting and Optimization to Reduce Food Waste for Short-Shelf-Life Products. 19-34 - Marie-Louise Lackner

:
Schedules Need to be Fair Over Time - Position Paper. 35-50 - Yoann Morello, Agata Ciabattoni:

A Bayesian View of the Result Model. 51-66 - Annabel Resch, Allan Hanbury:

Towards Fair AI Systems: An Insurance Case Study to Identify and Mitigate Discrimination. 67-82 - Francis Saa-Dittoh

, Anna Bon
, André Baart, Gossa Lô:
TiBaLLi: Internet Inclusion Through Artificial Intelligence. 83-93 - Nikolas Zechner

, Florian Güldenpfennig
, Michael Funk:
Normative Challenges in Europe's Digital Infrastructure: A Transdisciplinary Exploration of Smart Meter Data Sharing. 94-109 - Rainer Rehak

:
Catastrophic Computation. On the Impossibility of Sustainable Artificial Intelligence. 110-118 - Thomas Welsh

, Diane Hassett, Bashar Nuseibeh
, Andrea Zisman
:
Adaptive Alignment of Human Values in Cyber-Physical Supply Chains. 119-134
Digital Humanism: Ethical and Legal Aspects
- Marcello Ceci

, Domenico Bianculli
:
Beyond the Digital Judge: Legal Reasoning in Compliance Checking and Compliance Choices. 137-152 - Claudia González-Márquez, Burkhard Schafer:

Visual Neuroprosthetics, Digital Humans and the Law of Evidence. 153-168 - Pia-Zoe Hahne

, Alexander Schmölz
:
Understanding the Humanist Notion of Trust in the Age of Generative AI. 169-178 - Silvia Erika Kober

:
What if the Avatar Can Read My Mind? Possibilities and Ethical Pitfalls of Human-Virtual Reality Interaction Integrating Artificial Intelligence. 179-189 - Klára Kolárová

, Timothée Schmude
:
Start Using Justifications When Explaining AI Systems to Decision Subjects. 190-202 - Lukas Madl

, Soner Bargu, Mert Cuhadaroglu:
Bridging Ethics and Regulation: How VBE Facilitates Compliance with the EU AI Act in High-Risk and General Purpose AI. 203-218 - Sara Pettinari

, Martina De Sanctis, Paola Inverardi
:
Realizing Ethical-Aware Business Processes. 219-235 - Guilherme Wood, Eugen Dolezal

, Lisa M. Berger, Petra Zandonella, Thomas Gremsl, Elisabeth Staudegger:
A Two-Axis Framework to Map Reasons for Neurotechnology Use. 236-249
Digital Humanism in Political and Social Sciences
- Betina Aumair, Doris Vickers:

Narrated Future: How Narratives Shape Our Digital Present. 253-262 - Tendai Ganduri

:
Climate Disasters and Risks in Online Expressions in South Africa. 263-279 - Christoph Konrath

, Anna Rathmair:
Parliaments in the Digital Age - Building Blocks for a Theoretical Framework. 280-294 - Jana Lasser

, Manfred R. Pfiffner:
Micro-degree Artificial Intelligence and Society. 295-307 - Mark Levine, Anastasia Kordoni

:
Why Digital Humanism Needs a Social Psychology-and How You Can Use Digital Data to Study Social Identities in Socio-Technical Systems. 308-316 - Matús Mesarcík

, Natália Slosiarová
:
Between Principle and Practice: Evaluating the EU AI Act Through the Lens of Digital Humanism. 317-332 - Anne Muchiri

, Joshua Rumo Arongo Ndiege
, Giannis Haralabopoulos
, Paula M. W. Musuva
, Paul Spiesberger
:
Readiness-Centered AI in Practice: Findings from a Pilot Chatbot for Digital Skilling of Older Adults in Low-Readiness Contexts. 333-347 - Sérgio Barbosa

:
On Digital Literacy to Curb Disinformation in Brazil. 348-357 - Juliane Benson

, Katharina Zeh
, Hannes Essfors, Hannes Fellner
, Julia Neidhardt, Andreas Baumann
:
Linguistic Diversity and Digitalization: An Ambivalent Relationship. 358-365 - Orsolya Gulyás

:
Unsustainable Imaginaries of Data Economies: Exploring the Concept of Waste for EU Digital Policy. 366-371 - Katja Mayer

, Stefan Skupien, Jochen Knaus
:
The Commons Approach: A Proposal for a Digital Humanist Agenda to (Re)Open Artificial Intelligence. 372-380 - Dimitri Prandner:

Are They Aware When AI is Used? And What do They Think that AI Should be used for? - Insights into the Digital Skills Austria III Study. 381-389 - Domenico Talia

:
Privacy Merchants and Data Protection in the Age of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence. 390-403
Breaking Disciplinary Silos: Digital Humanism Across Disciplines
- Giovanni Adorni

, Emanuele Bellini
, Ilaria Torre
:
Reclaiming Agency Through Cyber Humanism: A European Agenda for AI, Education and Culture. 407-420 - Carlo Ghezzi

, Masoud Ebrahimi
, Damir Isovic
, Marjan Sirjani
:
Breaking Disciplinary Silos: The Case of Software Engineering. 421-435 - Brian P. Harper

, Hamid R. Ekbia:
Economies of Labor in the Age of AI: The Case of YouTube. 436-450 - Andrea Hrckova

, Jennifer Renoux
, Rafael Tolosana-Calasanz
, Daniela Chudá, Martin Tamajka, Jakub Simko
:
AI Research Is Not Magic, It Has to Be Reproducible and Responsible: Challenges in the AI Field from the Perspective of Its PhD Students. 451-466 - Éva Kaczkó, Lana Ivanjek

, Lisa-Maria Norz
, Elske Ammenwerth
:
Thinking Along the Lines Generated by GenAI? A Systematic Mapping Study on Academic Writing. 467-482 - Charles Lang, Christopher Moffett, Lalitha Vasudevan

:
The Architecture of Academic Overproduction: Toward Post-AI Scholarship. 483-498 - Kian Schmalenbach

, Bastian Brechtelsbauer:
Designing Deliberative Digital Communication Platforms. 499-514 - Alexandru Balasescu

:
Who Wants to Live Forever? AI-Centricity as Ex-centricity of Death. 515-521 - Simon Huber:

Paperwork vs. Paperplay - The Media History of Playing Cards as aLudological Critique of Contemporary Digital Culture. 522-528 - Erich Prem:

Vulnerability as a Design Ethics for Digital Humanism. 529-536 - Anke Schneider

, Cornelia Gerdenitsch
:
Unpacking the Tensions of Empowerment in Digital-Self Tracking: A Digital Humanism Perspective. 537-543

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