Fondation Pierre Elliot Trudeau
Information

Êtes-vous membre
de la communauté ?

Rendez-vous dès maintenant sur l'intranet pour gérer et mettre à jour votre profil, vous connecter et collaborer en rejoignant des groupes d'intérêt, et accéder à des ressources essentielles telles que des politiques, des modèles et des guides utiles.

Leah Davis
Boursière 2025 Active

Leah Davis (elle)

Université McGill
PosteDoctoranteFacultéFaculté d'ingénierieDépartementDépartement de génie électrique et informatiqueProgrammeConception et politique en matière d'éthique de l'IA
LinkedIn

Champs d'intérêt

Leah Davis doctorante en génie électrique et informatique au laboratoire RAISE (Responsible Autonomous Intelligent Systems Ethics Lab) de l’Université McGill. Elle est titulaire d’une maîtrise en sciences des données sociales de l’Université d’Oxford et d’un Baccalauréat en génie biomédical de l’Université de Guelph. Forte de diverses expériences de bénévolat et dans l’industrie pour des organismes consacrés à l’éthique de l’IA, au développement de la formation en ingénierie et à des initiatives de génie pour les femmes, sa recherche doctorale porte sur les pratiques d’audit algorithmique sociotechnique en collaboration avec l’Université du Québec à Montréal et le Mila – Institut québécois d’intelligence artificielle. Elle espère contribuer aux mouvements de réglementation et de politique en matière d’IA dans le domaine du génie de la sécurité, notamment en créant des mécanismes de responsabilisation parmi les acteurs de l’écosystème canadien de l’IA.

Originaire de North Bay, en Ontario, Leah a grandi dans une communauté francophone et a amélioré son français grâce aux interactions locales et à sa participation à un programme d’immersion à l’Université Laval (Québec). Estimant que nous sommes façonnés par ceux qui nous entourent, Leah sera heureuse de collaborer avec les autres bénéficiaires de la bourse, les fellows et les mentors pour en apprendre davantage sur l’expérience des personnes visées par son travail. Dans le cadre du programme de bourses, elle entend participer activement aux forums collectifs comme ceux du programme d’interaction publique. En dehors de la recherche, Leah aime le kickboxing, l’aviron et préparer des desserts végétaliens.

(Re)pointer du doigt : responsabilité procédurale dans l’évaluation des systèmes algorithmiques

Measuring What Matters: Connecting AI Ethics Evaluations to System Attributes, Hazards, and Harms

2025

Over the past decade, an ecosystem of measures has emerged to evaluate the social and ethical implications of AI systems, largely shaped by high-level ethics principles. These measures are developed and used in fragmented ways, without adequate attention to how they are situated in AI systems. In this paper, we examine how existing measures used in the computing literature map to AI system components, attibutes, hazards, and harms. Our analysis draws on a scoping review resulting in nearly 800 measures corresponding to 11AI ethics principles. We find that most measures focus on four principles – fairness, transparency, privacy, and trust – and primarily assess model or output system components. Few measures account for interactions across system elements, and only a narrow set of hazards is typically considered for each harm type. Many measures are disconnected from where harm is experienced and lack guidance for setting meaningful thresholds. These patterns reveal how current evaluation practices remain fragmented, measuring in pieces rather than capturing how harms emerge across systems. Framing measures with respect to system attributes, hazards, and harms can strengthen regulatory oversight, support actionable practices in industry, and ground future research in systems-level understanding. Rismani, S., Shelby, R., Davis, L., Rostamzadeh, N., & Moon, A. (2025, October). Measuring What Matters: Connecting AI Ethics Evaluations to System Attributes, Hazards, and Harms. In Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society (Vol. 8, No. 3, pp. 2199-2213).

En savoir plus

Affiliate Researcher - Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)

2025

General All-Purpose Sociotechnical Algorithmic Auditing Project: In collaboration with Professor AJung Moon at McGill University and Dr. Dominic Martin and Dr. Sébastien Gambs at Université du Québec à Montréal, in addition to L'Observatoire international sur les impacts sociétaux de l'IA et du numérique (OBVIA). Following an extensive scoping review process of over 3,000 algorithmic evaluation articles, this work aims to consider the complexities and potential solutions for systems-level AI audits of general-purpose AI systems, including large language models, visual and audio models, and image-to-text models.

Affiliate Researcher - Université De Montréal (UdeM)

2025

Gaps in Robotic/AI Governance: In collaboration with Professor AJung Moon at McGill University, Dr. Pierre Larouche at the Université De Montréal, and Dr. Keri Grieman at the University of Oxford, this project intersects engineering, regulation, and law. It examines the regulatory gaps in AI and robotics in Canada and their implications. It aims to unpack the following: a) the unique nature of the robotics ecosystem in Canada and its relationship to the AI ecosystem; b) existing regulations and standards on responsible robotics internationally and in Canada; and c) critical governance gaps for embodied AI systems in Canada. A primary objective aims to bridge policymakers, robotics and AI industry actors, and academics across the two disparate but closely related fields through consultations with start-ups, SME, industry, academia, non-profits, and standards organizations.

Affiliate Researcher - Mila - Quebec AI Institute

2025

Responsible AI Measures Project: In collaboration with Shalaleh Rismani and Professor AJung Moon at McGill University, and Dr. Renee Shelby, and Dr. Negar Rostamzadehat at Google Research, as well as Mila - Quebec AI Institute.

En savoir plus

Vadasz Doctoral Scholar Fellowship

2025

The Vadasz Scholars Program supports outstanding graduate students accepted into a doctoral degree program at the McGill Faculty of Engineering, enabling future engineering leaders to gain the expertise and skills needed to solve problems that matter. The program provides a fully-funded stipend (~$128,000) to allow students to pursue their doctoral studies.

Mackenzie King Scholarship

2023

Received for MSc, Social Data Science at the University of Oxford. Graduates of Canadian universities who pursue graduate study in the United States or the United Kingdom in the areas of international relations or industrial relations.

2025 Scholar Thesis Presentation - Leah Davis

2025

Leah Davis is an Electrical and Computer Engineering PhD Student in the Responsible Autonomous Intelligent Systems Ethics Lab at McGill University. Through diverse volunteer and industry experiences in AI ethics organizations, engineering education development, and Women in Engineering initiatives, her doctoral research investigates sociotechnical algorithmic auditing practices in collaboration with l’Université du Québec à Montréal and Mila – Institut québécois d’intelligence artificielle. She hopes to contribute to forthcoming AI regulatory and policy movements in safety engineering, particularly in creating accountability mechanisms among actors in the Canadian AI ecosystem. Watch her three-minute thesis presentation titled “(Re)Pointing the Finger: Procedural Accountability in Humanizing Algorithmic System Evaluation” during an introductory meeting in Saint-Paulin, Quebec.

En savoir plus

McGill’s latest Trudeau Foundation Scholar bridges engineering and ethics

2025

Leah Davis’s research into how artificial intelligence systems interact with their social environments sits squarely at the intersection of engineering and the social sciences, blending technical expertise with ethical inquiry. This interdisciplinary focus is at the heart of her work. And it helps explain why the McGill PhD student in Electrical and Computer Engineering has won a 2025 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholarship, an award typically reserved for scholars in the social sciences and humanities. Davis, who began her doctoral work in January 2025, said she sees her work as bridging both worlds.

En savoir plus

OrganisationMila - Institut d'IA du QuébecPosteChercheuse affiliée / InstructriceProfessionIngénieure stagiaire