Embedding Ethical Principles in Collective Decision Support Systems

Authors

  • Joshua Greene Harvard University
  • Francesca Rossi University of Padova and IBM T. J. Watson
  • John Tasioulas King's College London
  • Kristen Venable Tulane University and IHMC
  • Brian Williams Massachusetts Institute of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.9804

Abstract

The future will see autonomous machines acting in the same environment as humans, in areas as diverse as driving, assistive technology, and health care. Think of self-driving cars, companion robots, and medical diagnosis support systems. We also believe that humans and machines will often need to work together and agree on common decisions. Thus hybrid collective decision making systems will be in great need. In this scenario, both machines and collective decision making systems should follow some form of moral values and ethical principles (appropriate to where they will act but always aligned to humans'), as well as safety constraints. In fact, humans would accept and trust more machines that behave as ethically as other humans in the same environment. Also, these principles would make it easier for machines to determine their actions and explain their behavior in terms understandable by humans. Moreover, often machines and humans will need to make decisions together, either through consensus or by reaching a compromise. This would be facilitated by shared moral values and ethical principles.

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Published

2016-03-05

How to Cite

Greene, J., Rossi, F., Tasioulas, J., Venable, K., & Williams, B. (2016). Embedding Ethical Principles in Collective Decision Support Systems. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.9804