Litcius/Paper detail

Trustworthy artificial intelligence

Scott Thiebes, Sebastian Lins, Ali Sunyaev

2020Electronic Markets547 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Artificial intelligence (AI) brings forth many opportunities to contribute to the wellbeing of individuals and the advancement of economies and societies, but also a variety of novel ethical, legal, social, and technological challenges. Trustworthy AI (TAI) bases on the idea that trust builds the foundation of societies, economies, and sustainable development, and that individuals, organizations, and societies will therefore only ever be able to realize the full potential of AI, if trust can be established in its development, deployment, and use. With this article we aim to introduce the concept of TAI and its five foundational principles (1) beneficence, (2) non-maleficence, (3) autonomy, (4) justice, and (5) explicability. We further draw on these five principles to develop a data-driven research framework for TAI and demonstrate its utility by delineating fruitful avenues for future research, particularly with regard to the distributed ledger technology-based realization of TAI.

Topics & Concepts

BeneficenceVariety (cybernetics)AutonomySoftware deploymentEconomic JusticeEngineering ethicsTrustworthinessFoundation (evidence)Knowledge managementSociologyBusinessComputer scienceManagement sciencePolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceEngineeringComputer securityLawOperating systemBlockchain Technology Applications and SecurityEthics and Social Impacts of AIIoT and Edge/Fog Computing