ADAPT Radio

The ADAPT Centre

ADAPT, the world-leading SFI Research Centre for AI-Driven Digital Content Technology, brings leading academics, researchers and industry partners together to deliver excellent science, engage the public, develop novel solutions for business across all sectors and enhance Ireland’s international reputation.

  1. Become A Savvy Cyber Citizen

    1 DAG GELEDEN

    Become A Savvy Cyber Citizen

    The increasing sophistication of AI-generated content—like deepfake video and perfect scam calls—is rapidly heightening the risk of disinformation, phishing, and social engineering for everyone. This evolution means all citizens, from primary school pupils to public service leaders, must urgently build digital resilience and cyber literacy. Professor Rachel Farrell and Paul Stanley discuss the critical need for cyber hygiene, effective educational strategies like the Cyber Citizenship project, and how businesses can establish robust disaster recovery plans to withstand major attacks. They share actionable advice on protecting data and fostering a community-wide culture of security. Joining the programme are Professor Rachel Farrell, Director of the Professional Master of Education programme at UCD, and Paul Stanley, Head of Engagement at Ireland's National Cyber Security Centre THINGS WE SPOKE ABOUT AI makes scams harder to detect. Cyber hygiene protects personal data. Urgency means an attack risk. Organisations need a recovery plan. Strong authentication prevents most incidents. GUEST DETAILS Professor Rachel Farrell is Director of the Professional Master of Education (PME) programme in the School of Education at University College Dublin (UCD). She is founder of the UCD Centre for Cyber Resilience Education (Cyberwise.ie) and is a Principal Investigator on the SECURE project focused on primary school cybersecurity education, supporting teacher capacity-building and student engagement. Paul Stanley is the Head of Engagement at Ireland's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC). He has a background in Information Security and Identity and Access Management and leads on the implementation of the EU/NCSC Cyber COREs project Connect with the Guests: Prof. Rachel Farrell Website: cyberwise.ie Social Media: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachel-farrell-phd-ucd/ Paul Stanley Social Media: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-stanley-a1ab29317/ MORE INFORMATION You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre For more information about ADAPT's groundbreaking AI and data analytics research visit www.adaptcentre.ie/

    30 min.
  2. 2 MRT

    Older Adults Need AI Confidence

    Artificial Intelligence is deeply embedded in essential everyday services, often without public awareness, making AI literacy a critical issue of personal autonomy, social inclusion, and online safety for older adults. Without foundational knowledge, this demographic risks being shaped by AI rather than shaping its future. The Age-Friendly AI initiative is working to close this knowledge gap through national dialogue and co-created literacy training. The episode explores participants' hopes for independent living technologies and their serious concerns regarding privacy, security scams, and complicated digital interfaces. It details the three- phase approach to developing accessible training rolled out across libraries. Dr Claire O'Connell is joined by Paula Kelly, a lecturer and lead on the Age-Friendly AI initiative at TU Dublin, and Michael Core, an electrical and electronic engineer and lecturer also at TU Dublin. They share insights from thousands of engagements with older adults across Ireland. THINGS WE SPOKE ABOUT ● AI literacy is essential for autonomy ● AI is embedded in everyday life ● Older adults engaged in co-creation ● Hopes and concerns shape training ● Need coordinated investment for upskilling GUEST DETAILS Paula Kelly is a lecturer and member of the tPOT Research Group in the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering at TU Dublin. She is the team lead on the Research Ireland funded Age- Friendly AI: Ireland's National Artificial Intelligence Literacy Initiative. This initiative fosters national dialogue on AI with older adults and co-creates a comprehensive, accessible, and inclusive national AI literacy programme. Michael Core is an electrical and electronic engineer and a lecturer also at the School of Electronic and Engineering in TU Dublin. He has a particular interest in integrating embedded systems using new web technologies and has many years of senior management experience in the telecommunications industry. Connect with the Guests: ● Paula Kelly email : paulakelly@tudublin.ie ● Michael Core linkedin: linkedin.com/in/michaelcore ● Website: https://agefriendlyai.ie/

    35 min.
  3. Trustworthy Information AI Knowledge Democracy

    2 FEB

    Trustworthy Information AI Knowledge Democracy

    Trustworthy information faces crisis as overwhelming content volume pushes people toward single trusted voices yet statistical language models trained on internet data produce plausible but sometimes incorrect answers lacking true intelligence or understanding. Professor Jennifer Edmond, Director Digital Humanities Trinity College Dublin leading KT 4D project examining AI, big data and democracy through humanities lens, alongside Éamonn Kennedy, Chief Innovation Officer News Corp developing verification systems at Storyful, explain why we're paradoxically returning to village information model after era of unlimited access created processing paralysis, how critical digital literacy requires people feeling agency toward information rather than passive ballroom dancing partners pushed by technology, why Digital Democracy Lab deliberately builds friction into platforms forcing users to question profiling, training data and system metabolism, and how three actors of technology developers, policy makers and citizens must collaborate rather than pushing responsibility between poles. GUEST DETAILS Professor Jennifer Edmond is Professor in Digital Humanities and Culture at Trinity College Dublin serving as Director of Postgraduate Programme in Digital Humanities and Culture and Co-Director of Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities. As TCD Principal Investigator for KT 4D project examining intersection between AI, big data and democracy through humanities lens, she leads research distinguishing between three actors of technology developers, policy makers and citizens exploring how to educate, regulate and innovate better. Éamonn Kennedy is Chief Innovation Officer at News Corp focusing on driving innovative user centric technology by building agile cross disciplinary teams. Leading R&D team at Storyful creating systems helping journalists and analysts understand and interpret vast amount of public content and data shared as societies move online, his work centres on journalism's core principles of transparency, provenance and trusted community voices. Before joining Storyful, he was founder and product lead for number of web-based startups winning industry innovation awards including Web Summit Spark of Genius. Connect with the Guests: Jennifer Edmond LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jenniferedmond/ Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities, Trinity College Dublin KT 4D Project Storyful News Corp ADAPT Centre: www.adaptcentre.ie MORE INFORMATION You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre For more information about ADAPT's groundbreaking AI and data analytics research visit www.adaptcentre.ie/

    30 min.
  4. Trustworthy Information AI Knowledge Democracy

    27 JAN

    Trustworthy Information AI Knowledge Democracy

    Trustworthy information faces crisis as overwhelming content volume pushes people toward single trusted voices yet statistical language models trained on internet data produce plausible but sometimes incorrect answers lacking true intelligence or understanding. Professor Jennifer Edmond, Director Digital Humanities Trinity College Dublin leading KT 4D project examining AI, big data and democracy through humanities lens, alongside Éamonn Kennedy, Chief Innovation Officer News Corp developing verification systems at Storyful, explain why we're paradoxically returning to village information model after era of unlimited access created processing paralysis, how critical digital literacy requires people feeling agency toward information rather than passive ballroom dancing partners pushed by technology. GUEST DETAILS Professor Jennifer Edmond is Professor in Digital Humanities and Culture at Trinity College Dublin serving as Director of Postgraduate Programme in Digital Humanities and Culture and Co-Director of Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities. As TCD Principal Investigator for KT 4D project examining intersection between AI, big data and democracy through humanities lens, she leads research distinguishing between three actors of technology developers, policy makers and citizens exploring how to educate, regulate and innovate better. Her work examines recommender systems including PhD student Arthur Azibach's research on cold start problem showing how new accounts quickly move toward political polarisation, emphasising need for critical digital literacy where people feel agency toward information rather than passive acceptance. Created Digital Democracy Lab interactive platform deliberately building friction to help users understand profiling, training data quality and AI system metabolism, facilitated at Beta Festival 2024 with handbook and tuning for different audiences particularly software developers in Dublin use case. Éamonn Kennedy is Chief Innovation Officer at News Corp focusing on driving innovative user centric technology by building agile cross disciplinary teams. Leading R&D team at Storyful creating systems helping journalists and analysts understand and interpret vast amount of public content and data shared as societies move online, his work centres on journalism's core principles of transparency, provenance and trusted community voices. Before joining Storyful, he was founder and product lead for number of web-based startups winning industry innovation awards including Web Summit Spark of Genius. As computer scientist and technologist, he emphasises optimism about technology as enabler whilst recognising need for common understanding of emerging terms like trustworthy AI, AGI and ASI. His perspective highlights journalism's increasing value as AI companies seek trusted content for training models, importance of commercial exchange recognising that value, and belief that journalism should remain person first with humans always involved in veracity, verification and community engagement whilst AI augments newsroom processes. Connect with the Guests: Jennifer Edmond LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jenniferedmond/ Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities, Trinity College Dublin KT 4D Project Storyful News Corp ADAPT Centre: www.adaptcentre.ie MORE INFORMATION: You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre For more information about ADAPT's groundbreaking AI and data analytics research visit www.adaptcentre.ie/ KEYWORDS #TrustworthyInformation #CriticalDigitalLiteracy #AIandDemocracy #JournalismValues #DigitalDemocracyLab

    30 min.
  5. AI Local Government Ethical Tools

    5 JAN

    AI Local Government Ethical Tools

    Local government faces challenge implementing generative AI ethically whilst maintaining public trust and data security as new EU AI Act regulations require basic AI literacy training for staff. Khizer Ahmed Biyabani, researcher with ADAPT at Trinity College Dublin and 2025 Digital Transformation Rising IT Star winner, alongside Richie Shakespeare, assistant staff officer Dublin City Council, explain Ireland's first local government generative AI Lab translating academic research into practical ethical AI tools, how retrieval model analysing council meeting minutes avoids hallucinations by training only on specific datasets preventing New South Wales Australia confusion, why four pillars covering governance, education, proof of concepts and enterprise scaling create systematic approach, and how smart gully life buoy monitoring sensors demonstrate broader Smart Cities innovation culture. Khizer Ahmed Biyabani is researcher with ADAPT at Trinity College Dublin recently winning Rising IT Star in Public Sector Award at 2025 Digital Transformation and AI Awards. Co-leading Ireland's first local government generative AI Lab translating academic research into ethical practical AI tools for public services, he runs Explain IT workshops with colleague Claudia Bailey from Smart Documents under Academy Near Future programme at Connect Resource Centre providing basic AI literacy training required by EU AI Act Article Four. Richie Shakespeare is assistant staff officer in Dublin City Council working within Smart Cities tech innovation section examining new emerging technologies, innovative processes and collaboration models making city operate smarter. Co-leading local government generative AI Lab partnership with ADAPT Centre at Trinity College Dublin, he focuses on internal process improvements identifying pain points staff experience whilst maintaining ethical considerations around data sensitivity and personal information protection. Connect with the Gen AI Lab: Website: www.adaptcentre.ie ADAPT Centre at Trinity College Dublin Dublin City Council Smart Cities Division MORE INFORMATION You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre For more information about ADAPT's groundbreaking AI and data analytics research visit www.adaptcentre.ie/

    28 min.
  6. AI Lesson Preparation Addresses Teachers Planning Burden

    01-12-2025

    AI Lesson Preparation Addresses Teachers Planning Burden

    Teachers face overwhelming preparation burden as global education shifts toward personalised learning and outcomes based curricula without adequate infrastructure support creating fragmented system between teachers, students, school leaders and departments. Dr Chris Byrne, founder and CEO of MESO offering intelligent planning software for teachers supported by Enterprise Ireland and ADAPT Centre Trinity College Dublin with PhD focused on curriculum change, explains why leaked UK government report showed 25% teachers considering quitting due planning burden requiring reducing class contact hours costing physical resources, how personalised education demands knowing 30 to 40 students' individual learning needs without providing additional time or infrastructure, why outcomes based education replaced topic textbook model with broad learning statements containing active verbs like discuss and investigate developing 21st century skills, and how AI enables creating unit plans, lesson plans, rubrics and success criteria whilst human teachers excel at predicting task duration where LLMs prove terrible. THINGS WE SPOKE ABOUT Teachers face overwhelming preparation burden personalised outcomes based education without adequate infrastructure fragmented system Leaked UK government report twenty five percent teachers considering quitting planning burden physical resource constraints Outcomes based education replaced topics with learning statements active verbs discuss investigate twenty first century skills GUEST DETAILS Dr Chris Byrne is Founder and CEO of MESO creating education planning software empowering teachers, students and school leaders through adaptive tools enhancing teaching and learning fostering environment where every learner can thrive. Supported by Enterprise Ireland commercialisation funding and partnering with Trinity College ADAPT Centre, world leading SFI Research Centre for AI-Driven Digital Content Technology, ensuring MESO at forefront of education innovation. Holding Postgraduate Diploma in Education Management from National University Ireland Maynooth and PhD from Trinity College Dublin where research focused on curriculum change, he brings perspective as former teacher with extensive classroom experience understanding planning burden firsthand. Active contributor to global conversation on education reform regularly speaking at national and international conferences sharing insights on curriculum innovation, adaptive learning technologies and educational transformation with research published in leading academic journals shaping contemporary discussions on effective education strategies influencing policy and practice in educational institutions worldwide. Connect with Dr Chris Byrne: Website: mesolab.ai ADAPT Centre: www.adaptcentre.ie Enterprise Ireland Commercialisation Funding Trinity College Dublin

    27 min.
  7. Who owns AI with Meredith Whittaker from Signal

    10-11-2025

    Who owns AI with Meredith Whittaker from Signal

    When your AI agent books a rental car, it needs your driver's license, credit card, calendar access and permission to message your contacts—creating what Meredith Whittaker calls "fundamental backdoor" threatening apps like Signal.  At ADAPT ADVANCE 2025, Signal Foundation President and AI Now Institute co-founder Meredith Whittaker joined Dr Abeba Birhane for a fireside chat dissecting why "bigger is better" serves hyperscaler monopolies not evidence.  How AI companions weaponise 1970s Eliza manipulation psychology on minors, why "open source AI" became marketing arbitrage exploiting software community goodwill, and what sovereign AI actually requires beyond anxiety signifiers—including democratic governance, trusted local data, and answers to "who owns deployment infrastructure?" 
 THINGS WE SPOKE ABOUT * “Bigger is better" AI myth protects hyperscaler monopolies, not users * Agentic AI demands sweeping permissions creating existential privacy backdoor threats * AI companions weaponize known psychological manipulation tactics against vulnerable minors * "Open source AI" exploits software community goodwill without delivering benefits * Sovereign AI requires democratic governance beyond geopolitical anxiety signaling today GUEST DETAILS Meredith Whittaker is President of the Signal Foundation and co-founder of the AI Now Institute—one of the most trusted voices in AI ethics, transparency and accountability. Her decade of work has profoundly shaped ethical AI frameworks, bringing impact from academia to industry. At Google, Meredith was core organizer for the 2018 Google Walkouts where over 20,000 employees protested military AI use (Project Maven), surveillance, and sexual misconduct—forcing Google to discontinue their military contract and oust implicated VPs. As AI Now Institute co-founder, her research cuts through AI hype, grounding discussions on what truly matters: power concentration, labour exploitation in AI pipelines, and protecting fundamental rights including privacy and rule of law. Her work exposes corporate capture, debunks "bigger is better" myths, reveals sustainability costs, and provides foundational open source research. Meredith has provided congressional testimony to US Congress and leads Signal—one of the most trusted privacy-friendly messaging apps. Her background building large-scale network measurement systems at Google gives her unique expertise in data quality, evaluation criteria manipulation, and how benchmark gaming serves hyperscaler interests over real-world effectiveness. Dr Abeba Birhane is founder and director of the AI Accountability Lab at Trinity College Dublin. Her groundbreaking research examines AI datasets, uncovering how larger datasets contain higher hateful content and pornography—debunking "bigger dissipates problems" assumptions. Her work on benchmarks and measurement demonstrates that purpose-built smaller models often outperform larger models in real-world contexts with appropriate contextual data. Connect with the guests: * Signal Foundation: signal.org * AI Now Institute: ainowinstitute.org * AI Accountability Lab: Contact through ADAPT Centre * Follow their research and writing on AI accountability MORE INFORMATION You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre For more information about ADAPT's groundbreaking AI and data analytics research visit www.adaptcentre.ie/ KEYWORDS #TrustedAI #AIaccountability #AIprivacy #AIgovernance #MeredithWhittaker

    43 min.
  8. Sea-Scan Maritime AI Technology

    06-10-2025

    Sea-Scan Maritime AI Technology

    Ireland's territorial waters are among Europe's largest, yet monitoring this vast maritime expanse for unauthorized vessels, environmental threats, and infrastructure protection remains an enormous challenge with current surveillance technologies. Professor Marco Ruffini and Dr. John Kennedy from Trinity College Dublin have developed Sea-Scan, a revolutionary system that transforms existing undersea telecommunications cables into comprehensive acoustic monitoring networks. Using distributed acoustic sensing and AI, their technology can detect and classify vessels across hundreds of kilometers of ocean using just one land-based device. THINGS WE SPOKE ABOUT ● Transforming existing fiber optic cables into underwater sensor networks ● AI detection of "dark vessels" that disable identification beacons ● Unique acoustic signatures for different vessel classifications ● Marine ecosystem monitoring and shipping noise impact assessment ● Real-time infrastructure protection from accidental damage ● Cost-effective surveillance across Ireland's vast territorial waters GUEST DETAILS Professor Marco Ruffini is Associate Professor and Fellow of Trinity College Dublin and Principal Investigator of both the CONNECT Telecommunications Research Centre and the IPIC Photonics Integration Centre. He specializes in optical network architecture at the Department of Computer Science and Statistics, focusing on converged metro/access network architecture, long-reach passive optical networks, and inter-data center connectivity. His expertise spans over two decades in optical communications and fiber sensing technologies. Dr. John Kennedy is Associate Professor in Vibrations, Acoustics and Dynamics at Trinity College Dublin. His current research centers on the use of advanced additive manufacturing techniques to design and fabricate novel acoustic metamaterials for environmental noise control. His research focuses on acoustics, noise control, aeroacoustics, additive manufacturing, and metamaterials, making him uniquely positioned to interpret underwater acoustic signals. MORE INFORMATION You can learn more about the Sea-Scan project and other cutting-edge research at Trinity College Dublin's ADAPT Centre here: www.adaptcentre.ie/ Adapt Radio is produced by DustPod.io for the ADAPT Centre QUOTES Having this many sensors in this environment helps us monitor activity that's happening in our waters. - John Kennedy Just by placing one device at one end of the fiber, I had a microphone every meter, so I can get a different sound every meter for all the 100 kilometers just with one device at one end. - Marco Ruffini This technology gives you a kind of unparalleled resolution of sensors underwater. It allows you to investigate questions that you know are very important for various different reasons. - John Kennedy You won't believe how often fiber gets cut due to digging... you could detect the noise of the vehicle that's trying to dig, and you could contact them, maybe 10 to 15 minutes in advance. - Marco Ruffini One of the exciting things about working in acoustics is that it sort of touches all aspects of human activity and also our daily lives." - John Kennedy KEYWORDS #distributedacousticsensing #marinesurveillance #fiberoptics #underwateracoustics #AImonitoring

    25 min.

Info

ADAPT, the world-leading SFI Research Centre for AI-Driven Digital Content Technology, brings leading academics, researchers and industry partners together to deliver excellent science, engage the public, develop novel solutions for business across all sectors and enhance Ireland’s international reputation.