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CLIP Talk: Valerie Chen (Carnegie Mellon)
Towards a science of human-AI teams
Abstract: AI models have the potential to support and complement human decision-makers and users. And yet, the deployment of human-AI teams still faces practical challenges. I’m interested in developing a more principled workflow for building human-AI teams, which involves carefully examining points in the team setup and asking the following questions: (i) what are the right metrics to optimize the AI model for, and (ii) how can we facilitate effective communication between humans and AI. In this talk, I will discuss how existing literature has attempted to answer each of these questions, their limitations, and promising alternatives.
Bio: Valerie is a Machine Learning Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research aims to improve human-AI interactions through a use-case-grounded lens and to leverage insights from practical user studies to design new interactive systems. Her research sits at the intersection of ML, NLP, and HCI. Valerie is a recipient of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, a former intern at MSR’s Fairness, Accountability, Transparency & Ethics in AI group, and a rising star in Data Science. Valerie completed her B.S. in Computer Science at Yale University.