Litcius/Paper detail

Understanding Frontline Workers’ and Unhoused Individuals’ Perspectives on AI Used in Homeless Services

Tzu-Sheng Kuo, Hong Shen, Jisoo Geum, Nev Jones, Jason Hong, Haiyi Zhu, Kenneth Holstein

202379 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recent years have seen growing adoption of AI-based decision-support systems (ADS) in homeless services, yet we know little about stakeholder desires and concerns surrounding their use. In this work, we aim to understand impacted stakeholders’ perspectives on a deployed ADS that prioritizes scarce housing resources. We employed AI lifecycle comicboarding, an adapted version of the comicboarding method, to elicit stakeholder feedback and design ideas across various components of an AI system’s design. We elicited feedback from county workers who operate the ADS daily, service providers whose work is directly impacted by the ADS, and unhoused individuals in the region. Our participants shared concerns and design suggestions around the AI system’s overall objective, specific model design choices, dataset selection, and use in deployment. Our findings demonstrate that stakeholders, even without AI knowledge, can provide specific and critical feedback on an AI system’s design and deployment, if empowered to do so.

Topics & Concepts

Software deploymentStakeholderKnowledge managementWork (physics)Service (business)Computer scienceBusinessProcess managementPublic relationsMarketingEngineeringPolitical scienceSoftware engineeringMechanical engineeringMobile Crowdsensing and CrowdsourcingEthics and Social Impacts of AIHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
Understanding Frontline Workers’ and Unhoused Individuals’ Perspectives on AI Used in Homeless Services | Litcius