Toward fairness in AI for people with disabilities SBG@a research roadmap

Author:

Guo Anhong1,Kamar Ece2,Vaughan Jennifer Wortman2,Wallach Hanna2,Morris Meredith Ringel2

Affiliation:

1. Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA & New York, NY and Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA

2. Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA & New York, NY

Abstract

AI technologies have the potential to dramatically impact the lives of people with disabilities (PWD). Indeed, improving the lives of PWD is a motivator for many state-of-the-art AI systems, such as automated speech recognition tools that can caption videos for people who are deaf and hard of hearing, or language prediction algorithms that can augment communication for people with speech or cognitive disabilities. However, widely deployed AI systems may not work properly for PWD, or worse, may actively discriminate against them. These considerations regarding fairness in AI for PWD have thus far received little attention. In this position paper, we identify potential areas of concern regarding how several AI technology categories may impact particular disability constituencies if care is not taken in their design, development, and testing. We intend for this risk assessment of how various classes of AI might interact with various classes of disability to provide a roadmap for future research that is needed to gather data, test these hypotheses, and build more inclusive algorithms.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Reference79 articles.

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