‘We have opened a can of worms’: using collaborative ethnography to advance responsible artificial intelligence innovation

With the recent rapid developments in artificial intelligence (AI), social scientists and computational scientists have approached overlapping questions about ethics, responsibility, and fairness. Joined-up efforts between these disciplines have nonetheless been scarce due to, among other factors, u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrés Domínguez Hernández, Richard Owen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Journal of Responsible Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23299460.2024.2331655
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Summary:With the recent rapid developments in artificial intelligence (AI), social scientists and computational scientists have approached overlapping questions about ethics, responsibility, and fairness. Joined-up efforts between these disciplines have nonetheless been scarce due to, among other factors, unfavourable institutional arrangements, unclear publication avenues, and sometimes incompatible normative, epistemological and methodological commitments. In this paper, we offer collaborative ethnography as one concrete methodology to address some of these challenges. We report on an interdisciplinary collaboration between science and technology studies scholars and data scientists developing an AI system to detect online misinformation. The study combined description, interpretation, and (self-)critique throughout the design and development of the AI system. We draw three methodological lessons to move from critique to action for interdisciplinary teams pursuing responsible AI innovation: (1) Collective self-critique as a tool to resist techno-centrism and relativism, (2) Moving from strategic vagueness to co-production, and (3) Using co-authorship as a method.
ISSN:2329-9460
2329-9037