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Ethical Design and Acceptability of Artificial Social Agents

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posted on 2022-11-02, 04:20 authored by Ravi T. Vythilingam

Artificial Social Agents (ASA), which are AI software driven entities programmed with rules and preferences to act autonomously with humans, are increasingly playing more human-like roles in society. As their sophistication grows, humans will share greater amounts of personal information, thoughts, and feelings with ASAs, which has significant ethical implications. The aim of this thesis is to investigate what ethical principles are of relative importance when people engage with ASAs and if there is a relationship between people’s values and the ethical principles they prioritise. The study uses the five AI4People Ethical principles (Beneficence, Non-maleficence, Autonomy, Justice, and Explicability) and Schwartz’s theory of human values. Scenarios with embedded ethical principles that involved an ASA taking on a role traditionally played by a human were created to understand the types of ASA attributes that are acceptable or unacceptable. We found that participants are most sensitive to ASA attributes that relate to Autonomy, Justice, Explicability, and the privacy of their personal data; and ASAs were more acceptable when used generally in society rather than personally. Models were created using Schwartz’s Refined Values as a possible indicator of how stakeholders discern and prioritise the different AI4People ethical principles when interacting with ASAs. 

History

Table of Contents

1 Introduction -- 2 Literature Review -- 3 Methodology -- 4 Results -- 5 Discussion -- 6 Conclusion and Future Work -- Appendix A: Ethics Approval Letter -- Appendix B: Survey Questions -- Appendix C: SPSS Modeler – Selected Rule Sets

Notes

A Thesis submitted to Macquarie University for The Degree of Master of Research

Awarding Institution

Macquarie University

Degree Type

Thesis MRes

Degree

Thesis (MRes), Macquarie University, Faculty of Science and Engineering, 2021

Department, Centre or School

Department of Computing

Year of Award

2022

Principal Supervisor

Deborah Richards

Additional Supervisor 1

Paul Formosa

Rights

Copyright: The Author Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer

Language

English

Extent

78 pages

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