How to develop an interdisciplinary research agenda on eye-tracking
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Presenter: Natalia Menéndez González
February 11th, 2025 | 11.00 am
Politecnico di Milano - Workshop Room
Smart Eyewear Lab (Bld. 39)
Via Pascoli, 70/3
Contact: Prof. Marco Carminati
February 11th, 2025 | 11.00 am
Politecnico di Milano - Workshop Room
Smart Eyewear Lab (Bld. 39)
Via Pascoli, 70/3
Contact: Prof. Marco Carminati
Sommario
On February 11th, 2025 at 11.00 am the seminar titled "How to develop an interdisciplinary research agenda on eye-tracking" will take place at Workshop Room, Smart Eyewear Lab (Building 39).
This seminar will cover how to develop research on eye-tracking with policy impact. It will start covering the state of the art of eye-tracking research in the social sciences field. After that, it will discuss how regulatory processes work at a European Union level and how to engage with policymakers and relevant stakeholders. Finally, it will debate how to build a research agenda on eye-tracking that reaches regulatory and enforcement authorities, starting from the technical domain. There will be a final slot for Q&A at the end.
This seminar will cover how to develop research on eye-tracking with policy impact. It will start covering the state of the art of eye-tracking research in the social sciences field. After that, it will discuss how regulatory processes work at a European Union level and how to engage with policymakers and relevant stakeholders. Finally, it will debate how to build a research agenda on eye-tracking that reaches regulatory and enforcement authorities, starting from the technical domain. There will be a final slot for Q&A at the end.
Biografia
Natalia Menéndez González is a PhD candidate at the Law Department of the European University Institute and a Research Associate at the Centre for a Digital Society at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies. She is also a co-founder of The Digital Constitutionalist blog, a visiting researcher at the Biometrics Law Lab of the Center for IT & IP Law at the KU Leuven Faculty of Law and Criminology and a former vice-chair of the PhD students in AI Ethics research group. She has taught seminars and lectures on AI and Law at the European University Institute, the School of Transnational Governance, the University of Turin, the University of York (Canada) and the University of Toronto. Her research has been featured in numerous volumes and journals, including “Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights” (Oxford University Press, 2023).