Well-being in the Digital World

Well-being in the Digital World

graphic of a brain superimposed on to digital circuits

Project dates

1 Sept 2023 – 1 Sept 2025 

Grant

European Commission [grant number 101102749] and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) [grant number EP/Y027973/1].

Principal Investigator

Dr Cristina Voinea

Description

The internet and other digital technologies, such as LLMs, are deeply embedded in our lives and are often seen as enhancers of life quality: they make various activities more efficient, freeing up time for other well-being enhancing activities; open up new possibilities for action and communication that were previously unavailable; and facilitate access to and sharing of information. However, internet services, apps and LLMs have also been associated with states of ill-being: they distract users from their purposes by instilling habits and goals that have not been deliberately chosen, spread mis- and disinformation which ultimately lead to polarization and radicalization, and weaken social cohesion and democracies worldwide. They also lead to deskilling, be it cognitive or moral. Given these perils, interest in how the internet and other digital technologies mediate well-being has grown exponentially in recent years. The overall objective of this research project is to offer a philosophically informed account of the impact of digital technologies on well-being that can be used to develop policy and design recommendations.

Publications

Lavinia Marin, Alexandra Morris, Cristina Voinea, Youssef Jallali. 2024. “Reflective and dialogical approaches in engineering ethics education”. In The Routledge International Handbook of Engineering Ethics Education, Tom Børsen, Diana Martin, Gunter Bombaerts, Roland Tormey, Shannon Chance, and Thomas Taro Lennerfors (Eds.), Routledge, In press.

Voinea, C., (2024), 'On Grief and Griefbots', Think, Vol: 23(67): 47-51 [Oxford Research Archives]

Voinea, C., Marin, L. and Vică, C., (2024), 'Digital Slot Machines: Social Media Platforms as Attentional Scaffolds', Topoi : an International Review of Philosophy, Vol: 43, pp 685–695 [Oxford Research Archives]

Voinea, C., Wangmo, T. and Vică, C., (2024), 'Paternalistic AI: the case of aged care', Humanities and Social Sciences Communication, Vol: 11: Article 824 [Oxford Research Archives]

Practical Ethics blog posts

Political Campaigning, Microtargeting, and the Right to Information, 26 January 2024

On Grief and Griefbots, 13 November 2023