Postphenomenological Study: Using Generative Knowing and Science Fiction for Fostering Speculative Reflection on AI-nudge Experience.

Journal: Science and engineering ethics
PMID:

Abstract

This study presents an evidence-based argument for integrating participatory inquiry practices into AI education, using science fiction films as a primary tool for examining human-technology relationships. Through a media-enhanced co-inquiry approach, facilitators and students first explore the entanglements of human-technology interactions before engaging with AI nudges-productivity prompts introduced during time-constrained, interdependent assembly tasks in an experimental setting. A postphenomenological analysis of focus group interview data reveals that students' collective responses to AI nudges reflect the competitive pedagogical culture of engineering, often reinforcing rigid, task-driven adaptation. However, moments of attunement to material conditions suggest that speculative thinking can serve as a catalyst for renegotiating entrenched norms of engineering rationality. By facilitating the movement of concepts and generating productive friction, speculation disrupts dominant conceptualizations of AI that the engineering community often readily subscribes to. This study highlights the necessity of a cultural shift in engineering education-one that embraces speculative inquiry as a means of fostering sociotechnical reflection and reimagining human-technology relations.

Authors

  • Ahreum Lim
    School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University, PO Box 876002, Tempe, AZ, 85287-6002, USA. ahreumli@asu.edu.
  • Aliki Nicolaides
    Department of Lifelong Education, Administration and Policy, College of Education, University of Georgia, U.S.A River's Crossing 417, 850 College Station Rd, Athens, GA, 30605, USA.
  • Xiaoou Yang
    School of Environmental, Civil, Agricultural and Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Georgia, USA STEM Research, Building 1 Rm 2036, 302 East Campus Road, Athens, GA, 30602, USA.
  • Beshoy Morkos
    School of Environmental, Civil, Agricultural and Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Georgia, USA STEM Research, Building 1 Rm 2036, 302 East Campus Road, Athens, GA, 30602, USA.