Luciana Ferrer
Independent researcher at the Institute of Computer Science (ICC), CONICET‑UBA, with an Electrical Engineering PhD from Stanford University; her main research area is machine learning applied to speech and language processing.
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Clear filtersIndependent researcher at the Institute of Computer Science (ICC), CONICET‑UBA, with an Electrical Engineering PhD from Stanford University; her main research area is machine learning applied to speech and language processing.
Showing 1151-1200 of 3286 results
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Alexis Carlier is the co-founder and CEO of Asymmetric Security, an AI-native digital forensics and incident response company that emerged from stealth in early 2026 with $4.2M in pre-seed funding. He was previously part of the founding team at the Centre for the Governance of AI (GovAI), where he served as Head of Strategy and contributed to the organization's transition from Oxford to an independent nonprofit. He also led AI security programs at RAND and the University of Oxford. Carlier holds a Master's degree in Economics from the Toulouse School of Economics. He received a Long-Term Future Fund grant in 2020 to survey leading AI safety and governance researchers on their beliefs about AI existential risk scenarios, work that was later published on the EA Forum and LessWrong co-authored with Sam Clarke and Jonas Schuett. He has also co-authored academic papers on AI governance topics including AI ethics board design and frontier AI regulation.
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Neil Crawford is a PhD student in Logic and Philosophy of Science at UC Irvine whose research focuses on evolutionary game theory and its implications for AI safety. He has been involved in the Effective Altruism community since his undergraduate studies at the London School of Economics (2018) and has been a central figure in building the AI safety community at UC Irvine. He organized AI Alignment Irvine (AIAI), facilitating weekly alignment reading groups and AI safety dinners, and helped recruit a core group of PhD students engaged in AI alignment research. He also facilitated the Arete Fellowship at UCI, an 8-week introduction to Effective Altruism, and co-organized EA at UC Irvine. He has received grants from EA Funds (Long-Term Future Fund) to support his organizing work, including a stipend for running AIAI and funding for AI safety dinners. He is listed as a member of the AI Safety Community Researchers group at the Future of Life Institute.
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Lead Researcher at Saving Humanity from Homo Sapiens, investigating how humanity can achieve very-long-term sustainability and a flourishing long-term future while avoiding global catastrophic and existential risks.

Matthias Georg Mayer is an independent researcher and mathematician working in AI safety, with a focus on agent foundations and providing formal guarantees for the safety of AI systems. He was a 2025 Alumni Fellow at Principles of Intelligence (PIBBSS), where he worked on theoretical alignment research. His earlier work centered on structural independence, a generalization of d-separation concepts applied to structural causal models (also known as Finite Factored Sets), and he co-authored the paper "Factored space models: Towards causality between levels of abstraction" (arXiv 2412.02579, December 2024) alongside Scott Garrabrant, Magdalena Wache, Leon Lang, Sam Eisenstat, and Holger Dell. More recently his interests have shifted toward the Learning Theoretic Agenda developed by Vanessa Kosoy, with particular focus on Infrabayesian-Physicalism as a means to address embedded agency. He has received funding from the Long-Term Future Fund (LTFF) to research framing computational systems in ways that surface meaningful concepts. He participates in the AI alignment community through the Alignment Forum and LessWrong under the handle matthias-g-mayer.
Remmelt Ellen is a Dutch AI safety organizer and researcher based in Amsterdam, Netherlands. He co-founded Effective Altruism Netherlands in 2017 and co-launched AI Safety Camp (AISC) in 2018, serving as an organizer for nearly every edition of the program. At AISC he oversees program design and currently coordinates Stop/Pause AI projects, working to onboard initiatives that advocate for halting or pausing unsafe AI development. His research focuses on AGI safety impossibility arguments, including formal reasoning on why advanced AI systems cannot be reliably controlled, developed in collaboration with a former Pentagon engineer. He authored the book "Artificial Bodies: How Machines Replace People" (2024), a critical examination of how Big Tech corporations create exploitative systems that consume human resources and disrupt ecological balance. He has received grants from the Long-Term Future Fund to support AI Safety Camp's virtual and in-person programs.
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Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics and affiliate faculty in the Department of Computer Science at Boston University, where she leads research at the intersection of computational semantics, pragmatics, and generalization in human and machine learners. She received her PhD in Cognitive Science from Johns Hopkins University, and her work has been supported by funders including the NSF, Google, and Open Philanthropy.
Making a feature-length documentary on AI. I communicate risks from AI to the public.
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Community Lead for the AI Safety Initiative at Georgia Tech and Psychology Ph.D. student who manages AISI’s meetings and socials and uses neuroscientific methods to study AI systems and brain computation.
Alignment researcher and organiser working on AI safety field-building in India, leading the Groundless Alignment Residency 2025 for Autostructures fellows to continue the Live Theory agenda and run research retreats.
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Stephen J. Hadley is a principal of Rice, Hadley, Gates & Manuel LLC, where he advises senior executives of major corporations on political and national security challenges in major emerging markets. He previously served as U.S. National Security Advisor from 2005 to 2009, after four years as Deputy National Security Advisor, and earlier was Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy.
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Yi Zeng is a Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and a Wu Yuzhang Chair Professor at the Gaoling School of Artificial Intelligence, Renmin University of China. He is the founding dean of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance (Beijing-AISI) and director of the Beijing Key Laboratory of Safe AI and Superalignment, as well as director of the International Research Center for AI Ethics and Governance and the Center for Long-term Artificial Intelligence. He serves on national and international bodies including the United Nations High-Level Advisory Body on AI and UNESCO’s Ad Hoc Expert Group on AI Ethics, and works primarily on AI safety, ethics, governance and brain-inspired AI.
Founding Partner at Lionheart Ventures and two‑time technology entrepreneur; previously co‑founded and served as CEO of corporate catering company Zesty (acquired by Square) and GroupSpaces, and has made 20+ angel investments after studying Mathematics at Oxford.
Dominic Armstrong is Podcast Technical Project Manager at 80,000 Hours. He holds a BBA and a technical degree in audio engineering, and before joining 80,000 Hours worked at an education nonprofit, taught music production, and worked as a freelance music producer and audio engineer supporting independent musicians.
Max is the Chief Growth Officer at Giving What We Can, where he leads cross‑team efforts to grow the organisation’s impact and its community of 10% and Trial Pledgers. He previously co‑founded Otrium, a company focused on solving the problem of excess inventory in fashion by creating an online marketplace for end‑of‑season clothes.
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Nathaniel B. Monson is a Founding Research Scientist at Guide Labs, a product-focused research company building inherently interpretable large language models. He holds a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Maryland, College Park, where his dissertation focused on computational topology including an approximation theorem on persistent homology, and a B.A. with High Honors from Swarthmore College. He transitioned into AI interpretability research in Autumn 2022, supported by a Long-Term Future Fund grant and a Lightspeed grant, with a focus on using mechanistic interpretability tools to extract objective functions from complex models and addressing polysemanticity in neural networks. On LessWrong and the Alignment Forum, he writes about AI alignment topics including mechanistic interpretability and long-term AI safety. Guide Labs, where he is a founding team member, recently open-sourced Steerling-8B, an 8-billion-parameter LLM designed so that every token produced can be traced back to its origins in training data.
Luiz Gabriel Braun is a journalist and marketing manager at AE Studio and Instill, contributing regular opinion and marketing columns to Economia SC.
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Bob Kolasky is a nonresident scholar in the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and senior vice president for critical infrastructure at Exiger, where he develops third‑party and supply‑chain risk management solutions for critical infrastructure organizations.
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AI security professional with a background in AI-led security operations and startup growth; at Straumli AI he leads the development of auditing tools that help developers screen AI models for dangerous capabilities and contribute to AI safety infrastructure.
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Josiah Lopez-Wild is a PhD candidate in the Logic and Philosophy of Science department at the University of California, Irvine, where he expects to complete his doctorate in Spring 2026. He holds a BA in Philosophy from Northwestern University and an MA in Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. His research focuses on computable decision theory and Bayesian epistemology, specifically developing computable versions of classical representation theorems from decision theory using tools from computable analysis and algorithmic randomness. He is the author of 'A Computable von Neumann-Morgenstern Representation Theorem' (forthcoming in Synthese, 2025) and co-authored 'Cartesian Frames' (2021) with MIRI researcher Scott Garrabrant and Daniel A. Herrmann, an AI alignment framework applying Chu space mathematics to agent theory. He was introduced to AI safety research through conversations within UCI's LPS program and has received funding from the Long-Term Future Fund for his PhD research related to AI safety.
Co-founder of Catalyze Impact, a non-profit organization that supports individuals in setting up AI safety organizations and hosts events on AI safety entrepreneurship and founding impactful AI safety projects.
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Game Design and Research Lead for Intelligence Rising, holding a PhD in Astrobiology and an MSci in Natural Sciences from University College London, with experience in interdisciplinary research and early‑stage technical startups, including co‑founding the Equilibria Network project on AI and collective intelligence.
Kyle Gracey is the Head of AI & Biosecurity at Future Matters, leading strategy and capacity-building work for clients such as think tanks and policymakers on AI and biosecurity risks. They have around 18 years of combined experience across consulting, policy, politics and social movements, including roles in the U.S. government and military and service to then–Vice President Joe Biden. Previously they helped build a major global network of climate organizations, co-founded an advocacy coalition at UN climate negotiations, managed nearly 100 consulting projects for Fortune 500 and other large companies in areas such as software, biotech and clean energy R&D, and earned degrees in fields including biochemistry and biophysics, economics, public policy and geophysical sciences.
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Executive Director of UC Berkeley’s Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity, where she leads a multidisciplinary research center on cybersecurity and AI security; co-founded and chairs the Consortium of Cybersecurity Clinics; previously served as Interim Executive Director of the Berkeley Institute for Data Science and as Senior Director of Strategic Planning at the ClimateWorks Foundation; holds an MBA in Sustainable Management from Presidio Graduate School and a B.A. from Rice University, with research interests in cybersecurity futures, digital risk communications, governance of cyber risk, and secure clean energy.
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