Joanna Joy Bryson (born 1965) is professor at Hertie School in Berlin. She works on Artificial Intelligence, ethics and collaborative cognition. She has been a British citizen since 2007.
Education
Bryson attended Glenbard North High School and graduated in 1982. She studied Behavioural Science at the University of Chicago, graduating with an AB in 1986. In 1991 she moved to the University of Edinburgh where she completed an MSc in Artificial Intelligence before an MPhil in Psychology.[1] Bryson moved to MIT to complete her PhD, earning a doctorate under Lynn Andrea Stein in 2001 for her thesis "Intelligence by Design: Principles of Modularity and Coordination for Engineering Complex Adaptive Agents".[2] In 1995 she worked for LEGO Futura in Boston, and then in 1998 she worked for LEGO Digital as an AI consultant with Kristinn R. Thórisson on cognitive architectures for autonomous LEGO characters in the Wizard Group. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Marc Hauser's Primate Cognitive Neuroscience at the Harvard University in 2002.[3]
In 2010 Bryson published Robots Should Be Slaves, which selected as a chapter in Yorick Wilks' "Close Engagements with Artificial Companions: Key Social, Psychological, Ethical and Design Issues".[7][8] She helped the EPSRC to define the Principles of Robotics in 2010.[9] In 2015 she was a Visiting Academic at the University of Princeton Center for Information Technology Policy, where she remained an affiliate through 2018.[10] She is focussed on "Standardizing Ethical Design for Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systems".[11] In 2020 she became Professor of Ethics and Technology at Hertie School of Governance in Berlin.[12]
Public engagements
Bryson's research has appeared in Science and on Reddit.[13][14] She has consulted The Red Cross on autonomous weapons and contributed to an All Party Parliamentary Group on Artificial Intelligence.[15]
In 2022, Bryson published an article for Wired magazine titled "One Day, AI Will Seem as Human as Anyone. What Then?". In the article she discussed the current limits of and future of AI, how the general public define and think about AI, and how AI interacts with people via Language and touches upon the topics of natural language processing, ethics and Human-computer interaction. Bryson also dissusses the recent EU AI Act.[16]
Honors and awards
In 2017, Bryson won an Outstanding Achievement award from Cognition X.[17] She regularly appears in national media, talking about human-robot relationships and the ethics of AI.[18][19]
^Bryson, Joanna Joy (2001). Intelligence by design : principles of modularity and coordination for engineering complex adaptive agents (thesis). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. hdl:1721.1/8230.