The international workshop “Trust Issues. Artificial Intelligence, Human 
Cognition, and Archaeology” will take place in Augsburg (Germany) on December 
8th 2023.

Through cross disciplinary dialogue and collaborative exploration, this 
workshop intends to enhance understanding of the potential pitfalls and 
opportunities associated with AI integration in archaeology. It seeks to 
identify strategies for developing trustworthy AI models, ensuring transparency 
and accountability, and integrating human cognitive skills with AI technologies 
to address challenging archaeological questions. Also, it will tackle the 
intrinsic incomplete and transformative nature of archaeological record, and 
consider the treat that these issues pose for the quantitative and qualitative 
interpretation of AI-derived results.

Participants will engage in case studies, presentations, and a panel discussion 
to examine the theoretical, ethical, epistemological, and practical 
implications of utilizing AI, especially in archaeology. The workshop will be 
hosted in the Augsburg University campus, building D, room 2126.

For those unable to attend in person, the Zoom link is:
https://uni-augsburg.zoom-x.de/j/65850631032?pwd=eFpRbklEcnFxTVByVW5JRzJCVGROQT09

For further information, please contact
[email protected]

Official webpage:
https://www.uni-augsburg.de/de/fakultaet/philhist/professuren/kunst-und-kulturgeschichte/klassische-archaologie/forschung/trust-issues-artificial-intelligence-human-cognition-and-archaeo/

The event is generously funded by the Graduate School for Humanities and Social 
Sciences of the University of Augsburg.

Program

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM: Registration

9:00 AM - 9:10 AM: Natascha Sojc, Theresia Dingelmaier (University of 
Augsburg): Official opening remarks

9:10 AM - 9:40 AM: Cinzia Bettineschi, Luigi Magnini (University of Augsburg - 
Germany/ Ca’ Foscari University of Venice - Italy): Opening Pandora’s (black) 
box. Addressing Trust Issues in AI Applications for Archaeology

9:40 AM - 10:10 AM: Jürgen Landauer (CAA Germany): Neurons in the mud: can we 
find ancient sites with Artificial Intelligence? Or what do we really find?

10:10 AM - 10:40 AM: Marco Ramazzotti, Alessandro Londei, Alessandro Di 
Ludovico (Sapienza University, Rome - Italy): Artificial Intelligence and Human 
Cognition. Automated Reasoning, Machine Learning and Autopoietic 
Classifications in Archaeology

10:40 AM - 11:00 AM: Morning Coffee Break

11:00 AM - 11:30 AM: Sabine Timpf (University of Augsburg - Germany): Should we 
trust simulated pedestrians?

11:30 AM - 12:00 PM: Gabriele Gattiglia (University of Pisa - Italy): From 
fascination to reflection. Potentiality and challenges of AI applications in 
archaeology

12:00 PM - 2:00 PM: Lunch Break

Session 3:
2:00 PM - 2:30 PM: Žiga Kokalj (ZRC SAZU - Slovenia) with contribution by Nejc 
Čož, Anthony Corns, Susan Curran, Dragi Kocev, Ana Kostovska, Ivica 
Dimitrovski, Steve Davis, John O’Keeffe, Robert Shaw: Developing a machine 
learning model for Irish archaeology and a user-friendly tool for Automatic 
Detection of Archaeological Features (ADAF)

2:30 PM - 3:00 PM: Agnes Schneider (University of Leiden - Netherlands): Taming 
complexity by using accountable knowledge-based ontologies for the analysis of 
archaeological remote sensing and near-surface geophysical data

3:00 PM - 3:20 PM: Afternoon Coffee Break

Session 4:
3:20 PM - 3:50 PM: Mike Lyons (University of Bonn - Germany): The chasm between 
proof of concept and real-world application: CNNs for the automated 
classification of ceramic fabrics

3:50 PM - 4:20 PM: Caroline Von Nicolai, Chrisowalandis Deligio, Markus Möller, 
Katja Rösler, Julia Tietz, Kerstin P. Hofmann, Karsten Tolle, David Wigg-Wolf 
(DAI/ Goethe-Universität Frankfurt - Germany) Celtic numismatics and artificial 
intelligence: The cooperative project ClaReNet

4:20 PM - 5:00 PM: Round Table Discussion

5:00 PM - 5:10 PM: Closing Remarks

5:10 PM: Conference Ends


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Cinzia Bettineschi (PhD)
Lecturer and Associate Researcher
Department of Classical Archaeology
University of Augsburg

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