Litcius/Paper detail

Who is responsible? US Public perceptions of AI governance through the lenses of trust and ethics

Prabu David, Hyesun Choung, John S. Seberger

2024Public Understanding of Science34 citationsDOI

Abstract

The governance of artificial intelligence (AI) is an urgent challenge that requires actions from three interdependent stakeholders: individual citizens, technology corporations, and governments. We conducted an online survey ( N = 525) of US adults to examine their beliefs about the governance responsibility of these stakeholders as a function of trust and AI ethics. Different dimensions of trust and different ethical concerns were associated with beliefs in governance responsibility of the three stakeholders. Specifically, belief in the governance responsibility of the government was associated with ethical concerns about AI, whereas belief in governance responsibility of corporations was related to both ethical concerns and trust in AI. Belief in governance responsibility of individuals was related to human-centered values of trust in AI and fairness. Overall, the findings point to the need for an interdependent framework in which citizens, corporations, and governments share governance responsibilities, guided by trust and ethics as the guardrails.

Topics & Concepts

InterdependenceCorporate governanceGovernment (linguistics)Public trustPublic relationsPerceptionBusinessPolitical sciencePsychologyLawPhilosophyFinanceNeuroscienceLinguisticsPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEthics and Social Impacts of AIDeath Anxiety and Social Exclusion
Who is responsible? US Public perceptions of AI governance through the lenses of trust and ethics | Litcius