Driverless cars are due to be part of day to day highway travel. Beyond
their technologies and safety reports lies a newer wrinkle posed by
three researchers, in the form of ethical questions which policy makers
and vendors will need to explore.
"Autonomous Vehicles Need Experimental Ethics: Are We Ready for
Utilitarian Cars?" is by Jean-Francois Bonnefon, Azim Shariff and Iyad
Rahwan. They are from Toulouse School of Economics, University of
Oregon and MIT.
We are told that self-driving cars
are capable of preventing road accidents and deaths in significant
numbers. More recent discussions, though, point to the next chapter of
driverless cars as to be more complex. When self-driving cars first
appear on roads, the safety picture may be nuanced, say experts, where
people are not necessarily prepared for the abundance of caution used by
automated drivers.
Now three researchers are adding to the mix of concerns to think about. That is, they are posing ethical questions raised by the presence of self-driving cars. Their paper on arXiv poses traffic situations involving unavoidable harm.
The question is over assessing the relative morality of different
algorithms—who gets harmed and who gets spared. (a) The car can stay on
course and kill several pedestrians, or swerve and kill one passer-by
(b) The car can stay on course and kill one pedestrian, or swerve and
kill its passenger (c) The car can stay on course and kill several
pedestrians, or swerve and kill its passenger.
Is the passenger killed to save the other people? One may consider MIT Technology Review's calling it "an impossible ethical dilemma of algorithmic morality."
The authors' abstract stated, "It is a formidable challenge to define
the algorithms that will guide AVs confronted with such moral dilemmas.
In particular, these moral algorithms will need to accomplish three
potentially incompatible objectives: being consistent, not causing
public outrage, and not discouraging buyers. We argue to achieve these
objectives, manufacturers and regulators will need psychologists to
apply the methods of experimental ethics to situations involving AVs and
unavoidable harm."
Continued MIT Technology Review: ''Should different decisions
be made when children are on board, since they both have a longer time
ahead of them than adults, and had less agency in being in the car in
the first place? If a manufacturer offers different versions of its
moral algorithm, and a buyer knowingly chose one of them, is the buyer
to blame for the harmful consequences of the algorithm's decisions?"
To be sure, "Figuring out how to build ethical autonomous machines is
one of the thorniest challenges in artificial intelligence today," the
authors wrote. "As we are about to endow millions of vehicles with
autonomy, taking algorithmic morality seriously has never been more
urgent."
The authors believe answers are most likely to come from surveys
employing the protocols of experimental ethics. Overall, they wrote, the
field of experimental ethics offers key insights into the moral and
legal standards that people expect from autonomous driving algorithms.
The researchers conducted three online surveys in June. The studies
were programmed on Qualtrics survey software and recruited participants
from the Mechanical Turk platform, for a compensation of 25 cents.
Results? They were "interesting," said MIT Technology Review,
"if predictable. In general, people are comfortable with the idea that
self-driving vehicles should be programmed to minimize the death toll."
The authors said, "Three surveys suggested that respondents might be prepared for autonomous vehicles
programmed to make utilitarian moral decisions in situations of
unavoidable harm. This was even true, to some extent, of situations in
which the AV could sacrifice its owner in order to save the lives of
other individuals on the road."
Offering his reflections on the research, Dave Gershgorn in Popular Science wrote, "Sure, driverless cars
can reduce traffic fatalities by up to 90 percent. And like the field
of ethics itself, what happens in the other 10 percent is still up for debate."
SOURCE:
TechXplore



No comments:
Post a Comment