This volume presents the proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Hybrid Human-Artificial Intelligence (HHAI 2024), held in Malmö, Sweden, from 10–14 June 2024. The focus of HHAI 2024 was on artificially-intelligent systems that cooperate synergistically, proactively, and purposefully with humans, amplifying rather than replacing human intelligence.
The HHAI field is driven by developments in AI, but it also requires fundamentally new approaches and solutions. For this reason, we encourage collaboration across research domains such as AI, HCI, cognitive and social sciences, philosophy & ethics, complex systems, and others. For this third international conference, we invited scholars from these fields to submit their best, original – new as well as in progress – work, and visionary ideas on hybrid human-artificial intelligence. The following list of topics is illustrative, not exhaustive:
∙ Human-AI interaction and collaboration
∙ Adaptive human-AI co-learning and co-creation
∙ Learning, reasoning and planning with humans and machines in the loop
∙ User modelling and personalisation
∙ Integration of learning and reasoning
∙ Transparent, explainable, and accountable AI
∙ Fair, ethical, responsible, and trustworthy AI
∙ Societal awareness of AI
∙ Multimodal machine perception of real-world settings
∙ Social signal processing
∙ Representations learning for communicative or collaborative AI
∙ Symbolic and narrative-based representations for human-centric AI
∙ The role of design and compositionality of AI systems in interpretable/collaborative AI
Contributions about all types of technology, from robots and conversational agents to multi-agent systems and machine learning models were welcome.
Acknowledgments
This edition of Hybrid Human-Artificial Intelligence was organised by the Hybrid Intelligence (https://www.hybrid-intelligence-centre.nl) and Humane-AI European Network, which also contributed financially to the conference, and was supported by The Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program – Humanity and Society (WASP-HS) (https://wasp-hs.org), AI Policy Lab (https://aipolicylab.se) and hosted by Malmö University, with support from Umeå University. Esra Karabiber and the Malmö University Conference Service also provided invaluable support in the organising of the conference.
We would like to take this opportunity to thank everybody who submitted their work for review and all those who presented their work at the conference. Special thanks also to the members of the programme committee, the organisers of the pre-conference workshops, tutorials, and creative events, and the sponsors of the conference for their contributions.
Fabian Lorig (General Chair)
Jason Tucker (General Chair)
Adam Dahlgren Lindström (General Chair)
Frank Dignum (General Chair)
Pradeep Murukannaiah (Program Chair)
Andreas Theodorou (Program Chair)
Pınar Yolum (Program Chair)