AILGOct 11, 2022

On Explainability in AI-Solutions: A Cross-Domain Survey

arXiv:2210.05173v16 citationsh-index: 40
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the problem of making AI decisions understandable for non-experts, but is incremental as it primarily reviews other surveys.

The paper surveys existing literature on explainability in AI, mapping findings to methods and reasons for explaining decisions, and notes that heterogeneity leads to individual explanatory frameworks.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) increasingly shows its potential to outperform predicate logic algorithms and human control alike. In automatically deriving a system model, AI algorithms learn relations in data that are not detectable for humans. This great strength, however, also makes use of AI methods dubious. The more complex a model, the more difficult it is for a human to understand the reasoning for the decisions. As currently, fully automated AI algorithms are sparse, every algorithm has to provide a reasoning for human operators. For data engineers, metrics such as accuracy and sensitivity are sufficient. However, if models are interacting with non-experts, explanations have to be understandable. This work provides an extensive survey of literature on this topic, which, to a large part, consists of other surveys. The findings are mapped to ways of explaining decisions and reasons for explaining decisions. It shows that the heterogeneity of reasons and methods of and for explainability lead to individual explanatory frameworks.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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