Literature DB >> 31659321

Drivers are blamed more than their automated cars when both make mistakes.

Edmond Awad1,2, Sydney Levine1,3,4, Max Kleiman-Weiner3,4, Sohan Dsouza1, Joshua B Tenenbaum5, Azim Shariff6, Jean-François Bonnefon7,8, Iyad Rahwan9,10,11.   

Abstract

When an automated car harms someone, who is blamed by those who hear about it? Here we asked human participants to consider hypothetical cases in which a pedestrian was killed by a car operated under shared control of a primary and a secondary driver and to indicate how blame should be allocated. We find that when only one driver makes an error, that driver is blamed more regardless of whether that driver is a machine or a human. However, when both drivers make errors in cases of human-machine shared-control vehicles, the blame attributed to the machine is reduced. This finding portends a public under-reaction to the malfunctioning artificial intelligence components of automated cars and therefore has a direct policy implication: allowing the de facto standards for shared-control vehicles to be established in courts by the jury system could fail to properly regulate the safety of those vehicles; instead, a top-down scheme (through federal laws) may be called for.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31659321     DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0762-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Hum Behav        ISSN: 2397-3374


  5 in total

1.  Feasibility of Deep Learning Algorithms for Reporting in Routine Spine Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Authors:  Kai-Uwe LewandrowskI; Narendran Muraleedharan; Steven Allen Eddy; Vikram Sobti; Brian D Reece; Jorge Felipe Ramírez León; Sandeep Shah
Journal:  Int J Spine Surg       Date:  2020-12

2.  From driverless dilemmas to more practical commonsense tests for automated vehicles.

Authors:  Julian De Freitas; Andrea Censi; Bryant Walker Smith; Luigi Di Lillo; Sam E Anthony; Emilio Frazzoli
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-03-16       Impact factor: 12.779

3.  Artificial Intelligence and Declined Guilt: Retailing Morality Comparison Between Human and AI.

Authors:  Marilyn Giroux; Jungkeun Kim; Jacob C Lee; Jongwon Park
Journal:  J Bus Ethics       Date:  2022-02-12

4.  Drivers of partially automated vehicles are blamed for crashes that they cannot reasonably avoid.

Authors:  Niek Beckers; Luciano Cavalcante Siebert; Merijn Bruijnes; Catholijn Jonker; David Abbink
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-28       Impact factor: 4.996

5.  When people are defeated by artificial intelligence in a competition task requiring logical thinking, how do they make causal attribution?

Authors:  Ryosuke Yokoi; Kazuya Nakayachi
Journal:  Curr Psychol       Date:  2022-01-14
  5 in total

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