ASAICLSDAug 20, 2025

Toward Responsible ASR for African American English Speakers: A Scoping Review of Bias and Equity in Speech Technology

arXiv:2508.18288v14 citationsh-index: 3Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses language marginalization in speech AI for African American English speakers and linguistically diverse communities, highlighting an incremental contribution by synthesizing existing research.

This scoping review analyzed 44 publications to examine fairness, bias, and equity in ASR for African American English speakers, identifying gaps in governance and proposing a governance-centered lifecycle framework for more responsible development.

This scoping literature review examines how fairness, bias, and equity are conceptualized and operationalized in Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) and adjacent speech and language technologies (SLT) for African American English (AAE) speakers and other linguistically diverse communities. Drawing from 44 peer-reviewed publications across Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Machine Learning/Natural Language Processing (ML/NLP), and Sociolinguistics, we identify four major areas of inquiry: (1) how researchers understand ASR-related harms; (2) inclusive data practices spanning collection, curation, annotation, and model training; (3) methodological and theoretical approaches to linguistic inclusion; and (4) emerging practices and design recommendations for more equitable systems. While technical fairness interventions are growing, our review highlights a critical gap in governance-centered approaches that foreground community agency, linguistic justice, and participatory accountability. We propose a governance-centered ASR lifecycle as an emergent interdisciplinary framework for responsible ASR development and offer implications for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers seeking to address language marginalization in speech AI systems.

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