Stefania Druga graduated with a Ph.D. in Creative AI Literacies at the University of Washington Information School. Most recently, she completed a research internship at Microsoft’s Human-AI eXperience Team focused on Large Language Models applications. Her research focuses on Large Language Models and the design of Creative AI tools and resources. She also enjoys designing and building future smart toys and games. She is a former an AI Resident at X Moonshot Factory, product engineer at Fixie.ai, a Weizenbaum Research Fellow. An awardee of the NSF Formal Verification in the Field Grant and the Jacobs Foundation Grant, she was previously a LEGO Papert Fellow during her time as a master student at MIT researching with Prof. Mitch Resnick and the Scratch team
Thibaut Labarre is an Engineering Lead at AngelList, where he applies his expertise in Natural Language Processing (NLP) to develop innovative solutions. Thibaut has been instrumental in leveraging Large Language Model (LLM) technology at AngelList, enabling the organization to streamline operations and empower team members to become prompt engineers. His work includes unlocking value from customer feedback at scale and automating legal document parsing with GPT-4. After graduating from UW with a degree in Computational Linguistics, Thibaut’s journey in the tech industry began with an internship at Amazon where he created Heartbeat, an NLP tool used internally by over 40,000 users to analyze customer feedback.
Richard Watts is associate professor in the Department of French and Italian Studies and founding co-director of the Translation Studies Hub at the University of Washington. He is a translator and conducts research and teaches courses in translation studies, the environmental humanities, and the literature and cinema the francophone world. In 2022, he developed a new course that explores the history of machine translation’s development and how it is changing the way everyone—immigrant communities, tourists abroad, content creators, product managers, medical interpreters, even translators of poetry—approach translation today. In fall 2024, he will co-teach a new course on AI and creativity in historical perspective.
Ken Workman is an enrolled member of the Duwamish Tribe, 5th generation Great-Grandson of Chief Seattle. His leadership with the Duwamish Tribe and community work includes serving as a Tribal Council member for the Duwamish Tribe’s governmental entity (now ex-officio Tribal Council member); former president of the Duwamish Tribal Services, the nonprofit arm of the tribe; and board service with the Duwamish River Cleanup Coalition and Southwest Seattle Historical Society. Ken is now retired from having had a long career at The Boeing Company’s Flight Operations Engineering Group, where he worked as a Systems and Data Analyst. He now enjoys retirement during which he takes long walks in the mountains east of Seattle where he lives on a river.