Special Luncheon Panel - Bioethics Roundtable - Responding to Uncertainty in Times of Global Change
NEW IBC FORMAT! This panel discussion focuses on how to respond more proactively and visibly to urgent global challenges such as pandemics, climate change, and artificial intelligence.
Organizer: Profs. Iris Pigeot and Frank Bretz
Speakers include:
Cailin O´Connor - Philosopher of social and behavioral science, a philosopher of science, and an evolutionary game theorist, Cailin is Chancellor’s Professor in the Department of Logic and Philosophy of Science and director of the Center for Socially Engaged Philosophy at UC Irvine. Her central research areas are misinformation, epistemic disfunction, and scientific communities which resulted in her book “The Misinformation Age”, published with the philosopher James Weatherall. She also researches norms and conventions of inequity.
Alex John London - K&L Gates Professor of Ethics and Computational Technologies at Carnegie Mellon University, Alex's work focuses on ethical and policy issues surrounding the development and deployment of novel technologies in medicine, biotechnology and artificial intelligence, on methodological issues in theoretical and practical ethics, and on cross-national issues of justice and fairness. He published a book on “For the Common Good: Philosophical Foundations of Research Ethics”. Moreover, being engaged with policy and oversight concerning innovation in science with a special emphasis on artificial intelligence, health, and biosecurity, he is a member of the WHO Expert Group on Ethics and Governance of AI whose “Guidance on Large Multi-Modal Models” was published in 2024 and whose report “Ethics and governance of artificial intelligence for health” was published in 2021.
Zhenyu Zhang, PhD is an Associate Professor and PhD Supervisor at the School of Public Health, Peking University (Department of Global Health). He received joint doctoral training at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and completed postdoctoral training at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. His research focuses on advancing causal inference approaches to understand how climate change affects population health, with particular emphasis on extreme climate events, infectious diseases, and environmental exposures. He integrates epidemiology, climate science, and advanced statistical modeling to identify causal pathways linking climate hazards to health outcomes. Dr. Zhang’s work further explores how urban resilience and adaptive capacity can mitigate climate-related health risks and how system dynamics modeling can characterize the impacts of climate hazards on interconnected urban subsystems, including healthcare systems and infrastructure. His research aims to provide actionable evidence for climate adaptation planning and public health policy.
He has published over 40 papers as first or corresponding author in the past five years (h-index: 24; ~2,200 citations). He serves as Associate Editor for BMC Medicine and statistical editor for JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions and JACC: Advances. He is also a contributing author to China’s Fifth National Climate Change Assessment Report.