Conference highlights male dominance in AI design

At a session on artificial intelligence during the Women and the future of science conference at the Royal Society in London, panellists discussed how new AI technologies are designed almost exclusively by men. Experts pointed to recent regressions in diversity and called for alternative models prioritising care. The discussion addressed biases beyond datasets, focusing on the industry's composition.

The session, chaired by computer scientist Wendy Hall, took place on the second day of the Women and the future of science conference at the Royal Society in London. An AI transcription tool repeatedly mistyped the name 'Julie' as 'Julian', underscoring the session's theme of women being erased from AI technologies. Panellists argued that this reflects a deeper issue: new AI systems, poised to transform society, are developed predominantly by men in a historically male-dominated tech sector. In the UK, only 25 per cent of computer science students are women, and Silicon Valley has grown more hostile to women in recent years, according to David Leslie of the Alan Turing Institute. He stated, “In the past two years, there’s been a regress,” attributing some impact to the Trump administration's policies, including a recent executive order targeting 'woke AI' and directing the US National Institute of Standards and Technology to remove references to misinformation, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and climate change from its AI risk framework. Rumman Chowdhury, a former US science envoy for AI and head of ethics at Twitter before her team was fired under Elon Musk, remarked, “I am in the world of frontier AI, and that is the world of AI without women.” Rachel Coldicutt, who researches social impacts of emerging technologies, echoed this: “If we think about what the world looks like without women in AI, I think that’s what we have at the moment. It’s not fantasy at all.” Examples of the gender data gap include technologies like crash test dummies and medical research designed for men. Chowdhury noted that only 2 per cent of venture capital funds women-led ventures and less than 1 per cent of healthcare research targets women's health conditions. Coldicutt urged, “We need to make tech work for 8 billion people, not eight billionaires,” and advocated for new models that 'prioritise care for people, for the planet.' Leslie called for transforming incentives to encourage AI development for social good, while Hall referenced the all-male 1950s Dartmouth conference that defined AI.

Related Articles

Illustration depicting AI cancer diagnostic tool inferring patient demographics and revealing performance biases across groups, with researchers addressing the issue.
Image generated by AI

AI cancer tools can infer patient demographics, raising bias concerns

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

Artificial intelligence systems designed to diagnose cancer from tissue slides are learning to infer patient demographics, leading to uneven diagnostic performance across racial, gender, and age groups. Researchers at Harvard Medical School and collaborators identified the problem and developed a method that sharply reduces these disparities, underscoring the need for routine bias checks in medical AI.

At the India AI Impact Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi described artificial intelligence as a turning point in human history that could reset the direction of civilisation. He expressed concern over the form of AI to be handed to future generations and emphasised making it human-centric and responsible. Experts have warned about risks including data privacy, deepfakes, and autonomous weapons.

Reported by AI

Women in India are increasingly embracing generative AI learning, completing online GenAI courses at higher rates than men despite lower overall enrolment. A new Coursera report highlights rising participation, key learning trends, and the growing role of women in shaping India's AI-ready workforce.

At the Game Developers Conference 2026 in San Francisco, generative AI tools drew mixed reactions, with demos from Google highlighting potential uses amid widespread developer skepticism. A recent industry report showed 52% of companies using the technology, but only 36% of workers incorporating it into their jobs, and 52% viewing it as harmful to the sector.

Reported by AI

Top executives from global AI firms and world leaders are gathering in New Delhi for the India AI Impact Summit, the first such event in a developing country. India aims to attract more investment in the AI sector. The summit seeks to amplify the voices of developing nations in global AI governance.

Leading AI coding assistants fail one in four tasks, according to a TechRadar analysis. The report points to serious gaps between hype and actual performance reliability, especially in structured output tasks. AI tools are far from flawless in these critical areas.

Reported by AI

Abhishek Singh, CEO of the IndiaAI Mission, has outlined a focused strategy for India's AI development, emphasizing practical, population-scale models over the global race for artificial general intelligence. In an interview, he highlighted India's potential as the world's inference capital and preparations for the upcoming AI Impact Summit in New Delhi. The approach prioritizes sovereign AI solutions tailored to Indian challenges in sectors like healthcare and agriculture.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline