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Pulse NYC’s AI Week Opens with a High-Stakes Question on Human Impact
Event

Pulse NYC’s AI Week Opens with a High-Stakes Question on Human Impact

Monday, May 11, 2026
New York, NY

About This Event

Momentum has a cost, and right now the bill is coming due. For the last 2 years, the industry ran hard on capability, compressing time, automating judgment, turning friction into throughput. Now the aftershock is showing up where dashboards do not reach. Attention feels leased. Work feels thinner. Human connection is starting to look like a UI problem. Inside the startup ecosystem, the conversation is shifting from what AI can do to whether any of it is compounding into something that resembles a better life.

On May 11, 2026, inside 45 West 29th Street, that tension becomes the agenda. “Are We Building Better Lives? Conversation on AI” sits inside AI Week New York, a Pulse NYC production running May 11–May 17 that draws a cross-section of builders, investors, and operators into one continuous dialogue. This is not a stage built for scale. It is calibrated for signal. At $22 a seat, the barrier is not financial, it is intentional. You are paying to participate, not to spectate, which changes the temperature of the room before the first word is spoken.

The format strips things down to what matters. Short reflections, then the floor opens. No slide decks to hide behind, no polished demos to steer the narrative. The audience becomes part of the operating system. Founders sit next to clinicians. Designers trade perspective with engineers. The kind of collisions that usually take 3 conferences to manufacture happen inside a single conversation. In a week full of noise, this is where the startup ecosystem goes to ask itself if it still recognizes what it is building.

The people shaping that moment carry weight because they operate at the edges where AI meets consequence. Dr. Ece Tekbulut, founder of Thinking Through, brings political theory into a space that rarely slows down long enough to question its own assumptions. Ben Shapiro, Associate Medical Director at MaineHealth Behavioral Health, anchors the discussion in lived outcomes, where mental health is not theoretical and trade-offs show up in real time. Seniha Koksal of Parsons works at the intersection of multi agent systems and creative expression, pushing on authorship in a world where machines collaborate. Evan Dorsky, a robotics engineer, ties software to the physical world, where decisions move from abstract to embodied. Human Machines co-hosts the room, with Geoff Gibbins’ work on human and AI collaboration quietly informing the subtext of every exchange.

What makes this different is not the topic. It is the posture. Most AI conversations still orbit capability. This one interrogates consequence. Health, work, creative expression, and human connection are not treated as verticals. They are treated as pressure points. When those four start to bend, markets follow. That is the signal sophisticated operators inside the startup ecosystem are already tracking, whether they say it out loud or not.

This is not an ethics exercise dressed up as a panel. It is a forward indicator. When clinicians, engineers, designers, and political theorists start aligning on the same discomfort, it means the cycle is turning. Products that ignore human outcomes will not just feel off, they will underperform. Teams that understand this early will design with different constraints, measure different things, and ultimately build companies that last longer than the hype cycle that funded them.

New York does not need another AI event. It needs rooms where the narrative gets challenged before it hardens into strategy. This is one of those rooms. The kind where conversations echo into product roadmaps, hiring decisions, and the quiet choices founders make about what is worth building next.