•  4
    Editorial to the special section on misuse and abuse of interactive technologies
    with Christoph Bartneck, Antonella De Angeli, and Catherine Pelachaud
    Interaction Studies 9 (3): 397. 2008.
  •  35
    Predicting trait impressions of faces using classifier ensembles
    with Loris Nanni
    In L. Magnani (ed.), computational intelligence, . pp. 403--439. 2009.
  •  261
    Questioning Artificial Intelligence in Psychoanalysis
    European Journal of Psychoanalysis. 2026.
    This paper problematizes the relation between artificial intelligence and psychoanalysis by posing three questions. First, what distinguishes the linguistic functioning of “talking things” such as AI systems from that of “speaking beings” structured by an unconscious? Second, can the functions of the psychoanalyst be automated without fundamentally altering the analytic process? Third, even if such automation were technically possible, would it preserve the ethical depth, transference, and exist…Read more
  •  156
    Two fundamental (and oftentimes opposing) metaphors have directed much of HCI design: HCI is communication and HCI is direct manipulation. Beneath these HCI metaphors, however, is the unspoken metaphor of Computer is woman. In this paper we expose this foundational metaphor. We begin by identifying the origin of computer is woman in the early history of computing. Drawing upon postmodern feminist theory, we then explore how this metaphor has resulted in the feminization of HCI is communication a…Read more
  •  120
    Primordia of Aprés-Coup
    S: Journal of the Circle for Lacanian Ideology Critique 10 202-244. 2018.
  •  58
    Editorial
    with Christoph Bartneck, Antonella De Angeli, and Catherine Pelachaud
    Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies / Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies 9 (3): 397-401. 2008.
  •  130
    To hear—to say: the mediating presence of the healing witness (review)
    AI and Society 27 (1): 53-90. 2012.
    Illness and trauma challenge self-narratives. Traumatized individuals, unable to speak about their experiences, suffer in isolation. In this paper, I explore Kristeva’s theories of the speaking subject and signification, with its symbolic and semiotic modalities, to understand how a person comes to speak the unspeakable. In discussing the origin of the speaking subject, Kristeva employs Plato’s chora (related to choreo, “to make room for”). The chora reflects the mother’s preparation of the chil…Read more