Authors
Elisabeth André, Sarah Bayer, Ivo Benke, Alexander Benlian, Nicholas Cummins, Henner Gimpel, Oliver Hinz, Kristian Kersting, Alexander Maedche, Max Muehlhaeuser, Jan Riemann, Bjoern W Schuller, Klaus Weber
Publication date
2019
Journal
Proceedings of the Pre-ICIS Workshop “Values and Ethics in the Digital Age
Volume
12
Issue
4
Pages
1-16
Description
Artificial intelligence has become an integral part of our daily lives. Today, we engage with intelligent agents at home, on the street, and at work. Rapid advances in technological capabilities make such intelligent agents increasingly human-like. Anthropomorphic agents are characterized by a high degree of socialness, intelligence, and efficiency. They afford many opportunities (eg, convenience, availability, automation) yet also bring along potential negative impacts on human users, such as uninformed decision making, loss of control, or intransparency. Thus, anthropomorphic agents mark a new quality of human-computer interaction that should consider values and ethics in their design process and outcome. However, typical outcomes to measure the quality of an intelligent agent from a user-centric perspective are limited to accessibility, usability, or user experience. In this position paper, we argue that in the design of anthropomorphic agents, we need to go beyond established HCI measures and propose a new outcome measure called “humaneness”.
Total citations
2020202120222023211
Scholar articles
E André, S Bayer, I Benke, A Benlian, N Cummins… - Proceedings of the Pre-ICIS Workshop “Values and …, 2019