
Doug Schmidt (photo: W&M News)
WILLIAMSBURG â Even though the title of William & Maryâs spring Tack Faculty Lecture is âSurfing the AI Wave: A Human-Centered Approach to Innovation and Ethics,â the speaker says AI is probably more than a wave. It might be closer to a tsunami.
âItâs a seismic shift reshaping every aspect of our society,â said Doug Schmidt, the inaugural dean of William & Maryâs new School of Computing, Data Sciences & Physics.
Schmidt will expound on the topic at 7 p.m. April 9 when he delivers the spring Tack Lecture in the Sadler Centerâs Commonwealth Auditorium.
The event is free and open to the public; however, attendees are requested to RSVP.
âJust as the printing press, the steam engine and the internet revolutionized the way we think, work and live, AI is challenging us to rethink the boundaries of human creativity, ethical responsibility and education itself,â Schmidt said. âThe question is no longer whether AI will influence our lives, but how we will shape its role in a way that preserves human ingenuity rather than diminishing it.â
In his new role, Schmidt will lead that charge on campus, bolstered by his own William & Mary education and with what he calls the âtimeless principlesâ he absorbed while getting his degree in sociology here.
âWilliam & Mary has long been a place where critical thinking and intellectual rigor thrive. Itâs where I learned not just to absorb knowledge, but to question, refine and apply it meaningfully,â Schmidt said. âDecades later, I find myself returning to principles instilled by my professors â principles that are more relevant today than ever as we grapple with the promises and perils of AI.â
In his talk, Schmidt plans to go into depth on those core values and explain how they will shape a âhuman-centered approachâ to AI.
An internationally recognized scholar with more than three decades of experience in academic and government leadership roles, Schmidt leads the first new school created at W&M in more than 50 years. The School of Computing, Data Sciences & Physics launches this fall, with a mission to prepare students for success in a data-driven world.
Schmidt sees his mission as nothing less than leading W&M into developing a human-centered approach to AI that integrates responsible innovation, ethical considerations and critical engagement.
Heâll also focus on how the university can address the growing digital divide between those who leverage AI effectively and those at risk of being left behind. âWe have to ensure that weâre not passive spectators but active participants in this transformation,â he said.
Launched in 2012, the Tack Faculty Lecture Series celebrates faculty excellence and the intellectual liveliness of the university. Through this series, a William & Mary professor addresses the community on a topic of general interest at least once a semester, showcasing the universityâs most engaging professors.
All lectures are free and open to the public.
âThis isnât just another lecture â itâs an invitation to be part of a conversation that will shape the future of education, work and society,â Schmidt said. âIf you care about the intersection of technology and ethics, or if you simply want to ensure that youâre surfing the AI wave rather than being swept away by it, you wonât want to miss this discussion.â