Litcius/Paper detail

What is the point of fairness?

Cynthia L. Bennett, Os Keyes

2020ACM SIGACCESS Accessibility and Computing98 citationsDOI

Abstract

Work integrating conversations around AI and Disability is vital and valued, particularly when done through a lens of fairness. Yet at the same time, analysing the ethical implications of AI for disabled people solely through the lens of a singular idea of "fairness" risks reinforcing existing power dynamics, either through reinforcing the position of existing medical gatekeepers, or promoting tools and techniques that benefit otherwise-privileged disabled people while harming those who are rendered outliers in multiple ways. In this paper we present two case studies from within computer vision - a subdiscipline of AI focused on training algorithms that can "see" - of technologies putatively intended to help disabled people but, through failures to consider structural injustices in their design, are likely to result in harms not addressed by a "fairness" framing of ethics. Drawing on disability studies and critical data science, we call on researchers into AI ethics and disability to move beyond simplistic notions of fairness, and towards notions of justice.

Topics & Concepts

Framing (construction)Computer scienceThrough-the-lens meteringDisability studiesEconomic JusticePoint (geometry)Position (finance)Engineering ethicsPower (physics)Internet privacySociologyLens (geology)Political scienceLawBusinessStructural engineeringGeometryMathematicsGender studiesPetroleum engineeringFinancePhysicsQuantum mechanicsEngineeringNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsEthics and Social Impacts of AIDisability Rights and Representation
What is the point of fairness? | Litcius