Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Moral Decision Making in Human-Agent Teams: Human Control and the Role of Explanations

View through CrossRef
With the progress of Artificial Intelligence, intelligent agents are increasingly being deployed in tasks for which ethical guidelines and moral values apply. As artificial agents do not have a legal position, humans should be held accountable if actions do not comply, implying humans need to exercise control. This is often labeled as Meaningful Human Control (MHC). In this paper, achieving MHC is addressed as a design problem, defining the collaboration between humans and agents. We propose three possible team designs (Team Design Patterns), varying in the level of autonomy on the agent’s part. The team designs include explanations given by the agent to clarify its reasoning and decision-making. The designs were implemented in a simulation of a medical triage task, to be executed by a domain expert and an artificial agent. The triage task simulates making decisions under time pressure, with too few resources available to comply with all medical guidelines all the time, hence involving moral choices. Domain experts (i.e., health care professionals) participated in the present study. One goal was to assess the ecological relevance of the simulation. Secondly, to explore the control that the human has over the agent to warrant moral compliant behavior in each proposed team design. Thirdly, to evaluate the role of agent explanations on the human’s understanding in the agent’s reasoning. Results showed that the experts overall found the task a believable simulation of what might occur in reality. Domain experts experienced control over the team’s moral compliance when consequences were quickly noticeable. When instead the consequences emerged much later, the experts experienced less control and felt less responsible. Possibly due to the experienced time pressure implemented in the task or over trust in the agent, the experts did not use explanations much during the task; when asked afterwards they however considered these to be useful. It is concluded that a team design should emphasize and support the human to develop a sense of responsibility for the agent’s behavior and for the team’s decisions. The design should include explanations that fit with the assigned team roles as well as the human cognitive state.
Title: Moral Decision Making in Human-Agent Teams: Human Control and the Role of Explanations
Description:
With the progress of Artificial Intelligence, intelligent agents are increasingly being deployed in tasks for which ethical guidelines and moral values apply.
As artificial agents do not have a legal position, humans should be held accountable if actions do not comply, implying humans need to exercise control.
This is often labeled as Meaningful Human Control (MHC).
In this paper, achieving MHC is addressed as a design problem, defining the collaboration between humans and agents.
We propose three possible team designs (Team Design Patterns), varying in the level of autonomy on the agent’s part.
The team designs include explanations given by the agent to clarify its reasoning and decision-making.
The designs were implemented in a simulation of a medical triage task, to be executed by a domain expert and an artificial agent.
The triage task simulates making decisions under time pressure, with too few resources available to comply with all medical guidelines all the time, hence involving moral choices.
Domain experts (i.
e.
, health care professionals) participated in the present study.
One goal was to assess the ecological relevance of the simulation.
Secondly, to explore the control that the human has over the agent to warrant moral compliant behavior in each proposed team design.
Thirdly, to evaluate the role of agent explanations on the human’s understanding in the agent’s reasoning.
Results showed that the experts overall found the task a believable simulation of what might occur in reality.
Domain experts experienced control over the team’s moral compliance when consequences were quickly noticeable.
When instead the consequences emerged much later, the experts experienced less control and felt less responsible.
Possibly due to the experienced time pressure implemented in the task or over trust in the agent, the experts did not use explanations much during the task; when asked afterwards they however considered these to be useful.
It is concluded that a team design should emphasize and support the human to develop a sense of responsibility for the agent’s behavior and for the team’s decisions.
The design should include explanations that fit with the assigned team roles as well as the human cognitive state.

Related Results

Autonomy on Trial
Autonomy on Trial
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash Abstract This paper critically examines how US bioethics and health law conceptualize patient autonomy, contrasting the rights-based, individualist...
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
<p><strong><span dir="ltr" role="presentation">1. Introduction</span></strong&...
A Critique of Principlism
A Critique of Principlism
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash INTRODUCTION Bioethics does not have an explicitly stated and agreed upon means of resolving conflicts between normative theories. As such, b...
Escaping the Shadow
Escaping the Shadow
Photo by Karl Raymund Catabas on Unsplash The interests of patients at most levels of policymaking are represented by a disconnected patchwork of groups … “After Buddha was dead, ...
NILAI MORAL DALAM NOVEL ORANG-ORANG BIASA KARYA ANDREA HIRATA
NILAI MORAL DALAM NOVEL ORANG-ORANG BIASA KARYA ANDREA HIRATA
Abstrak Kata Kunci: Nilai Moral Baik dan Buruk,  NovelOrang-Orang Biasa. Nilai-nilai Moral adalah ajaran baik atau buruk perbuatan atau kelakuan, akhlak, kewajiban, budi pekerti...
Moral epistemology
Moral epistemology
Epistemology is the study of knowledge and justified belief. So moral epistemology is the study of what would be involved in knowing, or being justified in believing, moral proposi...
Decision‐making in entrepreneurial teams with competing economic and noneconomic goals
Decision‐making in entrepreneurial teams with competing economic and noneconomic goals
AbstractResearch SummaryHow should decision‐making be organized in entrepreneurial teams  pursuing competing economic and noneconomic goals? Using a computational model, we examine...
Explanation in history and social science
Explanation in history and social science
Historians and social scientists explain at least two sorts of things: (a) those individual human actions that have historical or social significance, such as Stalin’s decision to ...

Back to Top