reSee.it Podcast Summary
Gen AI is reshaping not just the technology, but who gets to shape it. Olga Russakovsky, a Princeton associate professor and associate director of the Princeton AI Lab, has built a career at the intersection of theory, systems, and real‑world impact. A co‑founder and board chair of AI4ALL, she has helped broaden access to AI and leadership opportunities. Her early work helped spark the ImageNet revolution, and today she balances building vision systems with studying their fairness, explainability, and societal implications.
Her conversation traces a arc from theoretical machine learning toward applied computer vision, a field she describes as understanding pixels and scenes—from autonomous vehicles to photo tagging, medical diagnostics, agricultural monitoring, and even space robotics. She notes that the diffusion models now reshaping generative AI have become part of computer vision, enabling both image understanding and generation. In her lab, this duality drives ongoing work on diffusion methods while also probing how these systems can be evaluated, controlled, and trusted.
Beyond technology, she emphasizes AI's social responsibilities. The Princeton AI Lab aims to recruit more students and faculty across disciplines, reflecting a shift toward interdisciplinary research that couples engineering with psychology, ethics, and policy. A fireside chat she and a co‑instructor will host with psychologist Molly Crocket is positioned to surface pitfalls of AI in scientific discovery—how it can speed up work yet risk narrowing the range of hypotheses. The conversation centers on balancing efficiency with room for creativity and surprise.
At the heart of her work is AI4ALL, a nonprofit she co‑founded to diversify AI talent. She argues that a lack of diversity of thought threatens the field by limiting problem framing and values guiding development. AI4ALL Ignite offers a year‑long program for Black, Latinx, and Indigenous women and non‑binary students, pairing AI education with responsible‑AI training, portfolio projects guided by industry mentors, and career‑readiness workshops. The program aims to broaden access to opportunities and to cultivate a new generation of leaders with broader perspectives.