[PHILOS-L] CFP: AI-Enabled Neurotechnologies (special issue) - deadline 2 October 2025

8 views
Skip to first unread message

Y J Erden

unread,
Jul 18, 2025, 2:26:09 PM7/18/25
to PHIL...@listserv.liv.ac.uk

CAUTION: This email originated outside of the University. Do not click links unless you can verify the source of this email and know the content is safe. Check sender address, hover over URLs, and don't open suspicious email attachments.

 
Dear all, 

We invite contributions to a special issue titled "AI-Enabled Neurotechnologies" in the Law, Ethics & Technology journal. This issue will focus on the intersection between artificial intelligence (AI) and neuroscience, broadly conceived. More details: https://www.elspub.com/journals/law-ethics-technology/special_issues/ai-enabled-neurotechnologies  

Topics include, but are not limited to:
  • The nature and/or role of regulation, e.g. Brain data in theory, law, policy, etc.
  • Neurorights, e.g. in philosophical or applied terms
  • AI-enabled neurotechnologies under the EU AI Act
  • Potential fields of application, e.g.: Basic research, medicine, psychiatry, wellness, etc.
  • Human enhancement
  • Consumer and recreation contexts
  • Legal, social, cultural, ethical issues, e.g. The nature and/or scope of access to and responsibility for AI-enabled neurotechnology development
  • Potential impacts on concepts of human identity, the self or personhood through (intimate) predictive neurotechnologies
  • AI-enabled neurotechnological approaches, e.g. Generative AI / Large Language Models (LLMs) and brain data
  • AI-enabled ‘mind-reading’, e.g. to ‘reveal’ inner speech or mental content
  • Interdisciplinary risks and/or opportunities.
Guest Editors:
Dr. Y. J. Erden, University of Twente, Netherlands
Dr. Stephen Rainey, University of Delft, Netherlands

Submission Deadline: 2 October 2025
Article Processing Charge: Fully waived for authors to this special issue


--
Dr Y. J. Erden
Associate Professor in Philosophy
University of Twente
AISB Vice Chair 

Philos-L "The Liverpool List" is run by the Department of Philosophy, University of Liverpool https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/philosophy/philos-l/ Messages to the list are archived at http://listserv.liv.ac.uk/archives/philos-l.html. Recent posts can also be read in a Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosL/ Follow the list on Twitter @PhilosL. Follow the Department of Philosophy @LiverpoolPhilos To sign off the list send a blank message to philos-l-unsub...@liverpool.ac.uk.

Y J Erden

unread,
Aug 31, 2025, 4:29:14 AM8/31/25
to PHIL...@listserv.liv.ac.uk

CAUTION: This email originated outside of the University. Do not click links unless you can verify the source of this email and know the content is safe. Check sender address, hover over URLs, and don't open suspicious email attachments.

 
Dear all, 

Following requests, the below deadline for submissions has been extended to 31 October 2025.

All the best,

yj


On Fri, 18 Jul 2025 at 16:41, Y J Erden <yje...@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear all, 

We invite contributions to a special issue titled "AI-Enabled Neurotechnologies" in the Law, Ethics & Technology journal. This issue will focus on the intersection between artificial intelligence (AI) and neuroscience, broadly conceived. More details: https://www.elspub.com/journals/law-ethics-technology/special_issues/ai-enabled-neurotechnologies  

Topics include, but are not limited to:
  • The nature and/or role of regulation, e.g. Brain data in theory, law, policy, etc.
  • Neurorights, e.g. in philosophical or applied terms
  • AI-enabled neurotechnologies under the EU AI Act
  • Potential fields of application, e.g.: Basic research, medicine, psychiatry, wellness, etc.
  • Human enhancement
  • Consumer and recreation contexts
  • Legal, social, cultural, ethical issues, e.g. The nature and/or scope of access to and responsibility for AI-enabled neurotechnology development
  • Potential impacts on concepts of human identity, the self or personhood through (intimate) predictive neurotechnologies
  • AI-enabled neurotechnological approaches, e.g. Generative AI / Large Language Models (LLMs) and brain data
  • AI-enabled ‘mind-reading’, e.g. to ‘reveal’ inner speech or mental content
  • Interdisciplinary risks and/or opportunities.
Guest Editors:
Dr. Y. J. Erden, University of Twente, Netherlands
Dr. Stephen Rainey, University of Delft, Netherlands

Submission Deadline: 31 October 2025 [extended]

Article Processing Charge: Fully waived for authors to this special issue


--
Dr Y. J. Erden
Associate Professor in Philosophy
University of Twente
AISB Vice Chair 

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages