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Seminar | AI and community-based research: ethics and interculturality

Seminars / Lectures / Workshops

Seminar_26 Nov_FB_X_Webpage_Updated
  • Date

    26 Nov 2025

  • Organiser

    Department of English and Communication

  • Time

    17:00 - 18:30

  • Venue

    UG09, UG/F, PolyU Hung Hom Bay Campus / Online via Zoom  

Speaker

Dr Sara Ganassin

Dr Jessica Bradley

Summary

In this joint talk we will discuss challenges and affordances of AI tools (e.g., conversational agents, chatbots) in diverse community contexts including refugee support groups and participatory arts and health programmes (Bradley & Pöyhönen, 2025; Ganassin et al., 2025). We draw on our extensive experience of carrying out qualitative research with vulnerable and often marginalised people to offer some insights into how AI is rapidly changing these environments and shaping how we do research.

We explore two main areas which we define as follows. First, the increasing presence of AI tools in people's everyday postdigital lives, for example AI translation tools being used to support interactions, memes and imagery being shared among friends and AI-based apps. Acknowledging that AI is more and more a part of people's day to day means that as researchers we must also think about how our lenses expand to incorporate and explore this. Second, the evolving research environment and adoption of tools for aspects of research that include data collection and analysis, and even research dissemination.

This requires us as researchers to critically educate ourselves widening our lenses as we navigate this new and evolving landscape. We will offer research-informed perspectives which foreground ethical and intercultural approaches, centring participants’ lives and voices whilst maintaining human agency.

 

References

Bradley, J. & Pöyhönen, S. (2025) Walking with: understandings and negotiations of the mundane in research. Applied Linguistics Review, 16(1), 345–367. doi.org/10.1515/applirev-2024-0069

Ganassin, S., Georgiou, A., & Brohi, H. (2025). ‘It would be better if you had a UK degree’: exploring the experiences of highly-skilled refugee women in the UK. Language and Intercultural Communication, 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2025.2519905

Keynote Speaker

Dr Sara Ganassin

Dr Sara Ganassin

Sara Ganassin is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Linguistics and Communication at the School of Education, Communication and Language Sciences, Newcastle University (UK). Her research interests include migrant and refugee communities; Chinese heritage language learning and teaching; and ethics and reflexivity in research with vulnerable groups.

Dr Jessica Bradley

Dr Jessica Bradley

Jessica Bradley is Senior Lecturer in Literacies and Language, in the School of Education at the University of Sheffield (UK). She is known for her research in applied linguistics and the arts, and she has conducted research with diverse communities, including creative practitioners and health-care professionals.

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