*** Apologies for cross-posting ***
*Special Issue on "Ethical Innovation with/in Music Technology" IEEE
Transactions on Technology and Society*
*https://technologyandsociety.org/transactions/special-issues/
<https://technologyandsociety.org/transactions/special-issues/>*
Recently, there has been increasing attention by the academic and
industrial research community towards topics at the confluence of music
technology and ethical and responsible innovation. Conceptual frameworks
and technical methods proposed to address issues related to diversity,
inclusivity, accessibility, environmental sustainability, surveillance, and
fair remuneration for artists are impacting the discussions of both
established communities (e.g., New Interfaces for Musical Expression or
Music Information Retrieval), and emerging ones (e.g., Internet of Musical
Things or Musical Metaverse).
The rapid progress and widespread adoption of Artificial Intelligence,
Extended Reality, and Internet of Things applied to music raise the urgent
question on how to concretely embed ethics and responsible innovation
practices in musical hardware and software development processes so that
the services provided do not infringe on the ethical rights of stakeholders
in the music ecosystem by performing ethical response-ability in the
ethical pluralism of music practices. Such stakeholders involve a
significant part of digital societies, including performers, composers,
audiences, music teachers and students, sound engineers, as well as music
labels and publishers.
The intent of this special issue is to identify the main considerations
around the ethical and responsible development of future music
technologies. We target ethical innovation in music technology as well as
with music technology. We aim at defining a promising road-map to account
for these considerations while maintaining the objective of pushing the
boundaries of musical hardware, software and socio-technical ecosystems,
thus merging musical innovation with the understanding of its impact on
society.
We invite theoretical and methodologically rigorous original submissions
that challenge, provoke, and expand these emerging frontiers. We welcome
both conceptual and experimental studies, corroborated by quantitative
and/or qualitative data. The studies can address a plethora of musical
activities, including composition, performance, improvisation, teaching and
learning, as well as broader ethical and responsible innovation issues in
and beyond the music industry.
Key topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Conceptualization of trustworthy musical ecosystems for digital
societies
- Trustworthy AI, Responsible AI and Explainable AI for musical
applications
- Ethics for the Musical Metaverse, Internet of Musical Things, Music
Information Retrieval, and New Interfaces for Musical Expression
- Environmental sustainability issues and solutions for the music
industry
- Dilemmas of creativity and autonomy in music technology
- Inclusivity and accessibility in music technology
- The plurality of ethics (cultural, legal, social and political) issues
related to innovative music technologies
- Trustworthy musical data ecosystem architectures, interfaces,
methodologies, orchestration, patterns, solutions, and technology platforms
- Impact of trustworthy musical ecosystems on digital societies at the
local, national and global levels
- Socio-economic fairness and ethical response-abilities in the music
industry
- The restoration of ancient instruments in a modern digital context and
the preservation of related cultural histories
- The benefits and risks of using an AI musical tutor: fast-tracking
tools for learning an instrument and means of production
- New responsible tools and techniques for teaching and learning music
in higher education
- Repositioning ourselves as researchers who perform ethical
response-ability
Important dates
- Submissions open: 1 January 2025
- Submissions close: 1 September 2025
- Author latest notifications of acceptance: 1 February 2026
- Final receipt of final files: 1 March 2026
- Publication of special issue: 1 June 2026
Guest Editors
- Prof. Luca Turchet, Department of Information Engineering and Computer
Science, University of Trento, Italy
- Prof. Nick Bryan-Kinns, Creative Computing Institute, University of
the Arts London
- Dr. Fabio Morreale, Sony AI, Barcelona, Spain
- Prof. James Brusseau, Department of Philosophy, Pace University, New
York City, USA
- Prof. Pamela Burnard, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge
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*Luca Turchet*, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Head of the *Creative, Intelligent & Multisensory Interactions Laboratory*
<https://www.cimil.disi.unitn.it/>
Chair of the *IEEE Emerging Technology Initiative on the Internet of Sounds*
<https://www.comsoc.org/about/committees/emerging-technologies-initiatives/internet-of-sounds>
Founder and President of the* Internet of Sounds Research Network
<https://www.internetofsounds.net/>*
Department of Information Engineering and Computer Science
University of Trento
Via Sommarive 9 - 38123 Trento - Italy
E-mail: luca.turchet(a)unitn.it
Tel: +39 0461 283792