Discussion on Getting Started with a Human-Centered AI Approach

Online event
Thursday, 12 June 2025
Discussion on Getting Started with a Human-Centered AI Approach

Discussion on Getting Started with a Human-Centered AI Approach

Online event
Thursday, 12 June 2025
4:00 PM - 6:00 PM America/Chicago


Event Announcement: Twin Cities AI Community Meetup – June 12th Topic Getting Started with a Human-Centered AI Approach, address fear Date & Time: Wednesday, June 12, 2025, 4:00–6:00 PM Duration: 1.5-hour sessions + 30 minutes of networking Location: TBD

Agenda

  1. Welcome & Networking (15 min)
  2. Review AI Bootcamp held April 17th, Polling & Insights (15 min)
  3. Present Why Human-Centered AI Matters (15 min)
  4. Foundational-AI: Responsible AI Framework Overview (15 min)
  5. Ethical AI Design Sprint Breakout + Q&A (30 min)
  6. Extended Networking & Peer Connection (30 min)

Session Topics & Objectives

1. Review AI Bootcamp held April 17th, Polling & Insights Focus: With over 600 polling responses, what we learned about AI fear, readiness, and the demand for Human-Centered AI Key Data:

  • 51% of participants are just getting started with AI, fear preventing progress in some cases
  • 52% are at Level 0: Random AI experimentation without strategy
  • 35% cited Human-Centeredness as the hardest Responsible AI principle to implement

2. Why Human-Centered AI Matters Focus: Risks of AI innovation without empathy, and the need for executive support and an enterprise strategy Key Data:

  • Top concerns include job loss, bias, and misuse
  • 16% said executive buy-in is low; another 7% reported no active discussion on AI

3. Foundational-AI Responsible AI Framework Overview Focus: The most difficult but critical principle—Human-Centeredness Key Data:

  • Part of putting in place Foundational-AI across the organization is to understand people
  • Human-Centeredness was the #1 challenge (35%) in Responsible AI implementation

4. Ethical Design Sprint Breakout + Q&A Focus: Applying Human-Centered AI design principles in a collaborative setting Format:

  • Overview of a lightweight ethical design sprint
  • Breakout activity (groups of 3) using prompts for real/hypothetical AI use cases
  • Summary share-outs and lessons learned

Learning Objectives

  • Understand and address fear-based barriers to AI adoption
  • Recognize what Human-Centered AI looks like in real-world use
  • Learn a practical method to assess AI’s human impact
  • Begin implementing ethical design thinking in your work

Organizer

Twin Cities Global AI Community, Minneapolis and Saint Paul
Minneapolis, United States