Atia Cortés

AI
h-index13
6papers
64citations
Novelty20%
AI Score28

6 Papers

CYAug 19, 2023
Artificial Intelligence across Europe: A Study on Awareness, Attitude and Trust

Teresa Scantamburlo, Atia Cortés, Francesca Foffano et al.

This paper presents the results of an extensive study investigating the opinions on Artificial Intelligence (AI) of a sample of 4,006 European citizens from eight distinct countries (France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Spain, and Sweden). The aim of the study is to gain a better understanding of people's views and perceptions within the European context, which is already marked by important policy actions and regulatory processes. To survey the perceptions of the citizens of Europe we design and validate a new questionnaire (PAICE) structured around three dimensions: people's awareness, attitude, and trust. We observe that while awareness is characterized by a low level of self-assessed competency, the attitude toward AI is very positive for more than half of the population. Reflecting upon the collected results, we highlight implicit contradictions and identify trends that may interfere with the creation of an ecosystem of trust and the development of inclusive AI policies. The introduction of rules that ensure legal and ethical standards, along with the activity of high-level educational entities, and the promotion of AI literacy are identified as key factors in supporting a trustworthy AI ecosystem. We make some recommendations for AI governance focused on the European context and conclude with suggestions for future work.

AIOct 23, 2025
Bias by Design? How Data Practices Shape Fairness in AI Healthcare Systems

Anna Arias-Duart, Maria Eugenia Cardello, Atia Cortés

Artificial intelligence (AI) holds great promise for transforming healthcare. However, despite significant advances, the integration of AI solutions into real-world clinical practice remains limited. A major barrier is the quality and fairness of training data, which is often compromised by biased data collection practices. This paper draws on insights from the AI4HealthyAging project, part of Spain's national R&D initiative, where our task was to detect biases during clinical data collection. We identify several types of bias across multiple use cases, including historical, representation, and measurement biases. These biases manifest in variables such as sex, gender, age, habitat, socioeconomic status, equipment, and labeling. We conclude with practical recommendations for improving the fairness and robustness of clinical problem design and data collection. We hope that our findings and experience contribute to guiding future projects in the development of fairer AI systems in healthcare.

AIMay 13, 2025
Explaining Autonomous Vehicles with Intention-aware Policy Graphs

Sara Montese, Victor Gimenez-Abalos, Atia Cortés et al.

The potential to improve road safety, reduce human driving error, and promote environmental sustainability have enabled the field of autonomous driving to progress rapidly over recent decades. The performance of autonomous vehicles has significantly improved thanks to advancements in Artificial Intelligence, particularly Deep Learning. Nevertheless, the opacity of their decision-making, rooted in the use of accurate yet complex AI models, has created barriers to their societal trust and regulatory acceptance, raising the need for explainability. We propose a post-hoc, model-agnostic solution to provide teleological explanations for the behaviour of an autonomous vehicle in urban environments. Building on Intention-aware Policy Graphs, our approach enables the extraction of interpretable and reliable explanations of vehicle behaviour in the nuScenes dataset from global and local perspectives. We demonstrate the potential of these explanations to assess whether the vehicle operates within acceptable legal boundaries and to identify possible vulnerabilities in autonomous driving datasets and models.

AINov 25, 2020
European Strategy on AI: Are we truly fostering social good?

Francesca Foffano, Teresa Scantamburlo, Atia Cortés et al.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is already part of our daily lives and is playing a key role in defining the economic and social shape of the future. In 2018, the European Commission introduced its AI strategy able to compete in the next years with world powers such as China and US, but relying on the respect of European values and fundamental rights. As a result, most of the Member States have published their own National Strategy with the aim to work on a coordinated plan for Europe. In this paper, we present an ongoing study on how European countries are approaching the field of Artificial Intelligence, with its promises and risks, through the lens of their national AI strategies. In particular, we aim to investigate how European countries are investing in AI and to what extent the stated plans can contribute to the benefit of the whole society. This paper reports the main findings of a qualitative analysis of the investment plans reported in 15 European National Strategies

CYSep 29, 2020
Signs for Ethical AI: A Route Towards Transparency

Dario Garcia-Gasulla, Atia Cortés, Sergio Alvarez-Napagao et al.

Today, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has a direct impact on the daily life of billions of people. Being applied to sectors like finance, health, security and advertisement, AI fuels some of the biggest companies and research institutions in the world. Its impact in the near future seems difficult to predict or bound. In contrast to all this power, society remains mostly ignorant of the capabilities and standard practices of AI today. To address this imbalance, improving current interactions between people and AI systems, we propose a transparency scheme to be implemented on any AI system open to the public. The scheme is based on two pillars: Data Privacy and AI Transparency. The first recognizes the relevance of data for AI, and is supported by GDPR. The second considers aspects of AI transparency currently unregulated: AI capabilities, purpose and source. We design this pillar based on ethical principles. For each of the two pillars, we define a three-level display. The first level is based on visual signs, inspired by traffic signs managing the interaction between people and cars, and designed for quick and universal interpretability. The second level uses factsheets, providing limited details. The last level provides access to all available information. After detailing and exemplifying the proposed transparency scheme, we define a set of principles for creating transparent by design software, to be used during the integration of AI components on user-oriented services.

CYApr 30, 2020
Covid-19 and contact tracing apps: A review under the European legal framework

Teresa Scantamburlo, Atia Cortés, Pierre Dewitte et al.

In this article, we would like to review the main technologies that have been proposed so far to fight the spread of the virus. Also, we would like to give an overview of the policy recommendations that some European organisations have put forward in these regards. Finally, we conclude with some considerations we would like to present to public attention and discussion.