HCAIJan 14, 2025

Building Symbiotic AI: Reviewing the AI Act for a Human-Centred, Principle-Based Framework

arXiv:2501.08046v310 citationsh-index: 29Mind Mach
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for regulatory-compliant, ethical AI design to enhance human-AI collaboration, though it is incremental as it synthesizes existing research rather than proposing new methods.

The paper conducted a systematic literature review to identify design principles for Symbiotic AI systems that align with human-centered approaches and the EU AI Act, resulting in four key principles and outlining current trends and challenges.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) spreads quickly as new technologies and services take over modern society. The need to regulate AI design, development, and use is strictly necessary to avoid unethical and potentially dangerous consequences to humans. The European Union (EU) has released a new legal framework, the AI Act, to regulate AI by undertaking a risk-based approach to safeguard humans during interaction. At the same time, researchers offer a new perspective on AI systems, commonly known as Human-Centred AI (HCAI), highlighting the need for a human-centred approach to their design. In this context, Symbiotic AI (a subtype of HCAI) promises to enhance human capabilities through a deeper and continuous collaboration between human intelligence and AI. This article presents the results of a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) that aims to identify principles that characterise the design and development of Symbiotic AI systems while considering humans as the core of the process. Through content analysis, four principles emerged from the review that must be applied to create Human-Centred AI systems that can establish a symbiotic relationship with humans. In addition, current trends and challenges were defined to indicate open questions that may guide future research for the development of SAI systems that comply with the AI Act.

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