Lucia Gomez’s research while affiliated with University of Geneva and other places

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Publications (3)


Computational diplomacy: how ‘hackathons for good’ feed a participatory future for multilateralism in the digital age
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

November 2024

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29 Reads

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3 Citations

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Lucia Gomez

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Ewa Lombard

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[...]

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Francesco Pisano

This article explores the role of hackathons for good in building a community of software and hardware developers focused on addressing global sustainable development goal (SDG) challenges. We theorize this movement as computational diplomacy: a decentralized, participatory process for digital governance that leverages collective intelligence to tackle major global issues. Analysing Devpost and GitHub data reveals that 30% of hackathons since 2010 have addressed SDG topics, employing diverse technologies to create innovative solutions. Hackathons serve as crucial kairos moments, sparking innovation bursts that drive both immediate project outcomes and long-term production. We propose that these events harness the neurobiological basis of human cooperation and empathy, fostering a collective sense of purpose and reducing interpersonal prejudice. This bottom–up approach to digital governance integrates software development, human collective intelligence and collective action, creating a dynamic model for transformative change. By leveraging kairos moments, computational diplomacy promotes a more inclusive and effective model for digital multilateral governance of the future. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Co-creating the future: participatory cities and digital governance’.

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Figure 21.1 Bipartite network of relationships between teams and submissions as weighted by precision scoring.
Figure 21.2 Network slice by submission rounds, in challenge and benchmark phases.
Figure 21.3 Determinants of collective intelligence in AIcrowd Food Recognition Challenge.
Figure 21.4 Detail on the relation between the variables used for modeling.
Altruistic collective intelligence for the betterment of artificial intelligence

October 2024

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41 Reads

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1 Citation


Computational Diplomacy: How "hackathons for good" feed a participatory future for multilateralism in the digital age

October 2024

·

34 Reads

This article explores the role of hackathons for good in building a community of software and hardware developers focused on addressing global SDG challenges. We theorise this movement as computational diplomacy: a decentralised, participatory process for digital governance that leverages collective intelligence to tackle major global issues. Analysing Devpost and GitHub data reveals that 30% of hackathons since 2010 have addressed SDG topics, employing diverse technologies to create innovative solutions. Hackathons serve as crucial kairos moments, sparking innovation bursts that drive both immediate project outcomes and long-term production. We propose that these events harness the neurobiological basis of human cooperation and empathy, fostering a collective sense of purpose and reducing interpersonal prejudice. This bottom-up approach to digital governance integrates software development, human collective intelligence, and collective action, creating a dynamic model for transformative change. By leveraging kairos moments, computational diplomacy promotes a more inclusive and effective model for digital multilateral governance of the future.

Citations (2)


... Hackathons are time-bounded events during which participants with different backgrounds and expertise form teams to collaborate on a project and create an artefact [20]. They are a global phenomenon [79] with thousands of events taking place every year 1 in various domains including entrepreneurship [40], corporations [67], (scientific) communities [38], education [75], civic engagement [47] and others [23]. These events are organized to foster various goals including the development of (innovative) technology [26,22,11], supporting learning [37,12,1,70,25], tackling civic and environmental issues [47,100,6,7,71] and building new or expanding existing communities [46,60,97,55]. ...

Reference:

How to organize an in-person, online or hybrid hackathon - A revised planning kit
Computational diplomacy: how ‘hackathons for good’ feed a participatory future for multilateralism in the digital age

... Maillart et al. identify Altruistic Collective Intelligence (ACI) as a core theoretical framework for advancing AI [45]. By integrating collective intelligence with intrinsic motivation and embracing principles of transparency and collaboration from the open-source movement, they argue that ACI balances technological innovation with ethical values. ...

Altruistic collective intelligence for the betterment of artificial intelligence