LGNCMay 20, 2023

(Machine) Learning to Be Like Thee? For Algorithm Education, Not Training

arXiv:2305.12157v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses ethical issues in AI for society, but is incremental as it builds on existing discussions of responsibility and bias.

This paper tackles the problem of unethical decisions by machine learning algorithms in society by proposing algorithm education as a solution, drawing an analogy with child education to provide directions for responsible AI design.

This paper argues that Machine Learning (ML) algorithms must be educated. ML-trained algorithms moral decisions are ubiquitous in human society. Sometimes reverting the societal advances governments, NGOs and civil society have achieved with great effort in the last decades or are yet on the path to be achieved. While their decisions have an incommensurable impact on human societies, these algorithms are within the least educated agents known (data incomplete, un-inclusive, or biased). ML algorithms are not something separate from our human idiosyncrasy but an enactment of our most implicit prejudices and biases. Some research is devoted to responsibility assignment as a strategy to tackle immoral AI behaviour. Yet this paper argues that the solution for AI ethical decision-making resides in algorithm education (as opposed to the training) of ML. Drawing from an analogy between ML and child education for social responsibility, the paper offers clear directions for responsible and sustainable AI design, specifically with respect to how to educate algorithms to decide ethically.

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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