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About

Elena Musi is a Senior Lecturer in Communication and Media and Program Lead of the MSc in Data Science and Communication. Her expertise lies at the interface between theoretical and Applied Linguistics, Communication Studies and Artificial Intelligence. Before joining the University of Liverpool, Elena worked as the Language Engineer for Alexa in Italian in the Amazon Alexa Applied Modelling and Data Science team (Cambridge, Mass.). She arrived to Amazon Alexa after having completed a Ph.D in Linguistics and Argumentation at the Università della Svizzera italiana and having been a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Computational Learning Systems at Columbia University and at the Laboratory for the Study of Applied Language Technology and Society at Rutgers University. During her postdoc she conducted research in the innovative area of Argumentation Mining, aimed at automatically retrieve arguments in support of opinions/sentiments spread on the web on a variety of matters of private and public interest. She has been awarded both an early-postdoc grant (funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation) and an advanced one (funded both by the SNSF and the COGITO foundation).

Elena investigates social and interactional meaning combining analyses grounded in linguistic theory with empirical validations through computational models with a particular emphasis on Argumentation and Artificial Intelligence. She deals mainly with Digital Media. She is particularly interested in the changes brought about by user-generated comments (forums, tweets) in community building, stance negotiation, persuasion strategies and social influence, as well as in the development of linguistically informed technologies to detect them. Bridging her academic research and her industry experience, Elena’s current research interweaves Artificial Intelligence and Communication Sciences with the broad aim of tracing back in a critical perspective debates about new technologies and their global impact, with particular focus on (mis)information, human-computer interaction and Generative AI.
Since at UoL Elena has been/is the main PI of the following projects: Parli: an Encyclopaedia of Opinion, funding agency: Paul Hamlyn Foundation (£10,759.43); Speak, think, eat: leveraging conversational bots to foster healthy eating, funding agency: Wellcome Trust- Institutional Strategic Support Fund Interdisciplinary and Industry fund (£11,789); Being Alone Together: Developing Fake News Immunity funding agency: UKRI, Economic and Social Research Council (TOT £210,000, UoL: £146,344); LATIF: Leveraging argument technology for impartial fact-checking”, EMIF, Gulbenkian Foundation (TOT; £336,000, UoL: £72,559). She has been/is Co-I in the following research projects: Liverpool COVID-SMART Pilot: Systematic Meaningful Asymptomatic Repeated Testing Evaluation: Department of health & social care (UK) (TOT UoL: £440,631), UKRI; Smart Data: Strategic Advice Team"(UK) (TOT: £643,411, UoL: £248,622).
Elena is a member of the steering committee of ECA (European Conference Argumentation). She has also been/is a member of scientific committees of the Vals Asla Annual Conference, the ARGAGE Conference, the Workshop on Argumentation Mining, COLING and ACL conferences. She, moreover, is a reviewer for various International peer-reviewed journals (e.g. Argumentation, Studies in Communication Sciences, Journal of Historical Linguistics, Bulletin suisse de linguistique appliquée, Learning, Culture and Social Interaction; Journal for Internet Policy Review, Journal of Language and Politics). With the broad aim of advancing AI for social good, Elena is currently involved in a variety of knowledge transfer events with communication gatekeepers and policymakers ranging from Public Health England to the World Health Organization.

Prizes or Honours

  • Best Paper Information Literacy Award for the paper "Developing Misinformation Immunity: How to Reason-Check Fallacious News in a Human–Computer Interaction Environment" (Purdue University, 2024)