"A cold, technical decision-maker": Can AI provide explainability, negotiability, and humanity?
Algorithmic systems are increasingly deployed to make decisions in many areas of people's lives. The shift from human to algorithmic decision-making has been accompanied by concern about potentially opaque decisions that are not aligned with social values, as well as proposed remedies such as e...
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Zusammenfassung: | Algorithmic systems are increasingly deployed to make decisions in many areas
of people's lives. The shift from human to algorithmic decision-making has been
accompanied by concern about potentially opaque decisions that are not aligned
with social values, as well as proposed remedies such as explainability. We
present results of a qualitative study of algorithmic decision-making,
comprised of five workshops conducted with a total of 60 participants in
Finland, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States. We invited
participants to reason about decision-making qualities such as explainability
and accuracy in a variety of domains. Participants viewed AI as a
decision-maker that follows rigid criteria and performs mechanical tasks well,
but is largely incapable of subjective or morally complex judgments. We discuss
participants' consideration of humanity in decision-making, and introduce the
concept of 'negotiability,' the ability to go beyond formal criteria and work
flexibly around the system. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2012.00874 |