Dr Kirsten Wahlstrom (she/they) is a research and teaching academic and a Certified Professional registered with the Australian Computer Society. While Kirsten acknowledges privileges that flow from her education, being cis, white, and from being an Australian citizen, as a child she experienced a low-SES lifestyle and as a woman in IT, she is marginalised and sometimes finds her voice unheard. She exercises empathy to the best of her ability, while inviting others to become more ethical in their decision-making and in their conduct.
Kirsten's research aims to perpetuate our safety and rights through revealing the effects of emerging technologies on social constructs and where necessary, identifying,... Read more
About me
Dr Kirsten Wahlstrom (she/they) is a research and teaching academic and a Certified Professional registered with the Australian Computer Society. While Kirsten acknowledges privileges that flow from her education, being cis, white, and from being an Australian citizen, as a child she experienced a low-SES lifestyle and as a woman in IT, she is marginalised and sometimes finds her voice unheard. She exercises empathy to the best of her ability, while inviting others to become more ethical in their decision-making and in their conduct.
Kirsten's research aims to perpetuate our safety and rights through revealing the effects of emerging technologies on social constructs and where necessary, identifying, validating and applying safeguards. She enjoys working as the Associate Editor for the Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society and she has been a co-investigator on three successful grants funding doctoral candidates. The first funded research into personalisation and search, the second funds research on social manipulation, and the third funds research on fake news in the wider context of public discourse.
Kirsten's research commitments are echoed in her dedication to service. In addition to her work at UniSA, she serves the professional and research communities through being the Vice-Chair of the Australian Computer Society's Ethics Committee and a member of its Profession Advisory Board, and she recently agreed to be the Associate Editor of the Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society. She has been a Section Editor for the Australasian Journal of Information Systems and she chaired the organising committee of the 2020 conference of the Australasian Institute of Computer Ethics.
Kirsten’s doctoral research was conducted at the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility at De Montfort University in Leicester, under the supervision of Dr Ben Fairweather, Assoc Prof Helen Ashman, Dr Sara Wilford, Prof Kathleen Richardson, and Mr Howell Istance. In this research, Kirsten developed and applied a novel method informed by critical theory to investigate the ways in which brain-computer interfaces disrupt privacy. The novel method was triangulated with Nissenbaum's contextual integrity approach to identifying privacy disruptions. The doctoral research thus produced a knowledge contribution and a methodological contribution. These were reported in five publications, some of which are listed in the Research Outputs section of this web page.
Kirsten holds five awards for outstanding teaching practice, among them a national award for providing experiential learning to transnational teams of students. Her teaching blends constructivist and experiential pedagogies to initiate and support meaningful transformations. She invites students to undertake purposive active learning tasks and critical reflections; these intellectual activities support the completion of cognitively demanding, multifaceted assessment tasks. Kirsten’s teaching is also characterised by collaborations in which her professional colleagues play an important role, giving talks, providing and supervising projects, coaching students, providing placements, and more.
Throughout her teaching, Kirsten has received positive feedback from students. A recent anonymous student commented, "An amazing educator - Kirsten shines in her role as DTDI lecturer and workshop presenter. She knows the material very well and has a true passion for the concepts and the potential of what this course can deliver. She is enthusiastic and tries to pass that on to her students. Thanks Kirsten." Another commented, "Absolutely fantastic instructor. Cannot fathom the time she spends on the course and making it interesting, exciting and beneficial to her students. Completely respectful and understanding of all kinds of needs. Knew the course off the back of her hand and kept the class in tow. By far the best instructor I have had so far."
Kirsten’s commitment and motivation emerge from her feminist principles which motivate respect for others, inclusivity, intellectual engagement, and social responsibility. In her free time, she works on the house her great-grandfather built and she flourishes in a strong and vibrant social network.
About me
Doctor of Philosophy De Montfort University
Master of Science (Computer Science) University of South Australia
Bachelor of Computer and Information Science University of South Australia
Social effects of emerging technology, learning and teaching, information ethics
Research
Research outputs for the last seven years are shown below. Some long-standing staff members may have older outputs included. To see earlier years visit ORCID, ResearcherID or Scopus
Open access indicates that an output is open access.
Year | Output |
---|---|
2013 |
Open access
|
Year | Output |
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2021 |
Open access
|
Year | Output |
---|---|
2020 |
Open access
17
5
38
|
2020 |
Open access
|
2017 |
Open access
|
2016 |
Open access
1
|
2008 |
1
|
Year | Output |
---|---|
2021 |
Open access
|
2020 |
Open access
|
2019 |
Open access
|
2019 |
Open access
|
2019 |
Open access
|
2019 |
|
2013 |
Open access
|
2013 |
Open access
|
2011 |
Open access
|
2009 |
Open access
1
|
2009 |
|
Research
Social effects of emerging technology, learning and teaching, information ethics
External engagement & recognition
Organisation | Country |
---|---|
Charles Sturt University | AUSTRALIA |
De Montfort University | UNITED KINGDOM |
Deakin University | AUSTRALIA |
Edinburgh Napier University | UNITED KINGDOM |
Flinders University | AUSTRALIA |
Grenoble School of Management | FRANCE |
Holochain | UNITED KINGDOM |
Santa Clara University | UNITED STATES |
University of Edinburgh | UNITED KINGDOM |
University of Maastricht | NETHERLANDS |
University of South Australia | AUSTRALIA |
External engagement & recognition
Engagement/recognition | Year |
---|---|
Chair of national Professional Ethics CommitteeAustralian Computer Society (ACS) - accrediting body of ICT programmes in Australian universities |
2023 |
Branch ExecutiveAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2022 |
Chair of national Professional Ethics CommitteeAustralian Computer Society (ACS) - accrediting body of ICT programmes in Australian universities |
2022 |
Associate editorJournal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society |
2021 |
Keynote panelETHICOMP 2021 |
2021 |
Advisory Board MemberAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2020 |
Certified ProfessionalAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2020 |
Chair, Organising Committee for 9th AiCE ConferenceAustralian Institute of Computer Ethics |
2020 |
Section EditorAustralasian Journal of Information Systems |
2020 |
Vice-chair: Ethics CommitteeAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2020 |
Advisory Board MemberAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2019 |
Chair, Organising Committee for 9th AiCE ConferenceAustralian Institute of Computer Ethics |
2019 |
Section EditorAustralasian Journal of Information Systems |
2019 |
Vice-chair: Ethics CommitteeAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2019 |
Advisory Board MemberAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2018 |
MemberAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2018 |
MemberInternet Society |
2018 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2018 |
Section EditorAustralasian Journal of Information Systems |
2018 |
Vice-chair: Ethics CommitteeAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2018 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2017 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2016 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2015 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2014 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2013 |
Member, Committee on Computer EthicsAustralian Computer Society (ACS) |
2012 |
Committee Member, vivasa - Classroom Connections Project, (Community organisation) , 2005 to 2006
Teaching & student supervision
Teaching & student supervision
Supervisions from 2010 shown
Thesis title | Student status |
---|---|
Authorship attribution in social media: a focus on binary n-gram analysis introducing novel approaches | Current |
Collective Intelligence Assemblies for Cyber Resilience | Current |
Digital forensic readiness for malicious insider threats: case studies in the financial services industry | Current |
Hoax photographs as information and misinformation | Current |
Librarianship placement from four perspectives: Placement students, higher education program providers, placement host institutions, and accreditation body | Current |
New authorship attribution methods to detect and manage social manipulation and fake news in social media | Current |
Standardised Incident Prevention and Response for Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises | Current |
Framing fake news: An analysis on its rhetorical strategies, `newsness¿ and how it creates social meaning | Completed |
Hybridized autonomous model for analysing work stress-related data using a multi-agent system | Completed |
Information security risk management in zero trust environments | Completed |