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Trolley Crash

Approaching Key Metrics for Ethical AI Practitioners, Researchers, and Policy Makers

Specificaties
Paperback, blz. | Engels
Elsevier Science | e druk, 2024
ISBN13: 9780443159916
Rubricering
Elsevier Science e druk, 2024 9780443159916
€ 157,00
Levertijd ongeveer 8 werkdagen

Samenvatting

The prolific deployment of Artificial Intelligence (AI) across different fields has introduced novel challenges for AI developers and researchers. AI is permeating decision making for the masses, and its applications range from self-driving automobiles to financial loan approvals. With AI making decisions that have ethical implications, responsibilities are now being pushed to AI designers who may be far-removed from how, where, and when these ethical decisions occur.

Trolley Crash: Approaching Key Metrics for Ethical AI Practitioners, Researchers, and Policy Makers provides audiences with a catalogue of perspectives and methodologies from the latest research in ethical computing. This work integrates philosophical and computational approaches into a unified framework for ethical reasoning in the current AI landscape, specifically focusing on approaches for developing metrics. Written for AI researchers, ethicists, computer scientists, software engineers, operations researchers, and autonomous systems designers and developers, Trolley Crash will be a welcome reference for those who wish to better understand metrics for ethical reasoning in autonomous systems and related computational applications.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780443159916
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Paperback

Inhoudsopgave

<p>1. Introduction<br>Michael R. Salpukas, Peggy Wu, Shannon Ellsworth and Hsin-Fu Wu<br>2. Terms and References<br>Michael R. Salpukas, Peggy Wu, Shannon Ellsworth and Hsin-Fu Wu<br>How is AI Changing Human Behavior?<br>3. Boiling the Frog: Ethical Leniency due to Prior Exposure to Technology<br>Noah Ari, Nusrath Jahan, Johnathan Mell and Pamela Wisniewski<br>Human Oversight vs. Ethical Simulation in Robots<br>4. Automated Ethical Reasoners Must Be Interpretation-Capable<br>John Licato<br>5. Towards Unifying the Descriptive and Prescriptive for Machine Ethics<br>Taylor Olson<br>6. Competent Moral Reasoning in Robot Applications: Inner Dialog as a Step Towards Artificial Phronesis<br>John Paul Sullins III, Antonio Chella and Arianna Pipitone<br>Measuring, Evaluating, and Auditing Ethical AI<br>7. Autonomy Compliance with Doctrine and Ethics Ontological Frameworks<br>Donald P. Brutzman, Hsin-Fu Wu, Curtis Blais and Carl Andersen<br>8. Meaningful Human Control and Ethical Neglect Tolerance; Initial Thoughts on How to Define Model and Measure Them<br>Christopher A. Miller and Marcel Baltzer<br>9. Continuous automation approach for autonomous Ethics Based Audit of AI Systems<br>Guy Lupo, Quoc Bao Vo and Natania Locke<br>10. A Tiered Approach for Ethical AI Evaluation Metrics<br>Peggy Wu, Hsin-Fu Wu, Brett Israelsen and Robert Grabowski<br>11. Designing Meaningful Metrics for Demonstrating Ethical Supervision of Autonomous Systems<br>Donald P. Brutzman and Curtis Blais<br>Research Topics and Methods: Ethical AI and Big Questions<br>12. Obtaining Hints to Understand Language Model-based Moral Decision Making by Generating Consequences of Acts<br>Rafal Rzepka and Kenji Araki<br>13. Emerging Issues and Challenges<br>Michael R. Salpukas, Peggy Wu, Shannon Ellsworth and Hsin-Fu Wu<br>Acronyms Appendix<br>Hsin-Fu Wu</p>
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        Trolley Crash