2023 Was The Year Of Generative AI. What Can We Expect In 2024?
Understanding the strengths & limitations of the technology is essential for using it in responsible, respectful & productive ways.
Dr TJ Thomson MAIATSIS AFHEA (Indigenous) FQA SFHEA is a senior lecturer in visual communication and digital media at RMIT and an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow (2023-26). T.J.’s research is united by its focus on visual communication. A majority of his research centres on the visual aspects of news and journalism and on the concerns and processes relevant to those who make, edit, and present visual news. He has broader interests in digital media, journalism studies, and visual culture and often focuses on under-represented identities, attributes, and environments in his research. T.J. is committed to not only studying visual communication phenomena but also working to increase the visibility, innovation, and quality of how research findings are presented, accessed, and understood. He has obtained more than $1.32 million in external research funding from a number of organisations, including the Australian Academy of the Humanities, the Australian Research Council, the Office of the Queensland Chief Scientist, the University of Nottingham Ningbo China, and the International Visual Literacy Association. T.J. undertakes research, postgraduate supervision, and media commentary in the following areas: - visual communication - visual journalism - media production - visual culture - journalism studies Leadership T.J. is actively involved nationally and internationally in a number of Associations and initiatives that contribute to the interdisciplinary visual communication field. These include serving on the editorial board of the journal *Visual Communication Quarterly* and acting as one of its associate editors (from 2017—present) and serving as an officer in a number of national and international journalism and communication associations, including the Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia, the National Communication Association, the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, and the International Communication Association. Awards and honours T.J.’s peers have honoured his research and disciplinary contributions with a number of awards and honours, including the Communication and Ageing Outstanding Journal Article Award from the National Communication Association; the James Edwards Article of the Year Award from the National Communication Association; the Diane S. Hope Book of the Year Award from the National Communication Association; the Anne Dunn Scholar of the Year Award, jointly bestowed by the Australian and New Zealand Communication Association and the Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia; the Distinguished Young Alumnus Award from Chadron State College; and top paper awards from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication and the International Communication Association. In 2022, T.J.'s peers elected him to the Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences in recognition of his significant contributions to the academy, the professions and/or society as a whole. In 2023, the Australian Academy of the Humanities awarded him the Max Crawford Medal, the country's most prestigious award for achievement and promise in the humanities. Prof. Daniel Angus is Professor of Digital Communication in the School of Communication, and Director of QUT’s Digital Media Research Centre. Daniel's research examines issues at the intersection of technology and society, with a focus on artificial intelligence, automation, misinformation, and new methods to study the digital society. Daniel has been involved in computer and social science research for 20 years and he contributes regularly to media and industry on the impact of technology on society. Daniel received a BS/BE double degree in research and development, and electronics and computer systems, and the PhD degree in computer science from Swinburne University of Technology, in 2004 and 2008, respectively. Between 2008 and 2018 he worked in a number of roles at The University of Queensland, leading collaborative research at the intersection of computer science, design, communication, linguistics, and journalism. He is a Chief Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision Making & Society, and the ARC Projects: Evaluating the Challenge of ‘Fake News’ and Other Malinformation; Using machine vision to explore Instagram’s everyday promotional cultures; and, Young Australians and the Promotion of Alcohol on Social Media.
Understanding the strengths & limitations of the technology is essential for using it in responsible, respectful & productive ways.