Gender and ethnicity bias in generative artificial intelligence text-to-image depiction of pharmacists

Author:

Currie Geoffrey12ORCID,John George1,Hewis Johnathan3

Affiliation:

1. School of Dentistry and Medical Sciences, Charles Sturt University , Wagga Wagga , Australia

2. Department of Radiology, Baylor College of Medicine , Houston , United States

3. School of Dentistry and Medical Sciences, Charles Sturt University , Port Macquarie , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Introduction In Australia, 64% of pharmacists are women but continue to be under-represented. Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is potentially transformative but also has the potential for errors, misrepresentations, and bias. Generative AI text-to-image production using DALL-E 3 (OpenAI) is readily accessible and user-friendly but may reinforce gender and ethnicity biases. Methods In March 2024, DALL-E 3 was utilized to generate individual and group images of Australian pharmacists. Collectively, 40 images were produced with DALL-E 3 for evaluation of which 30 were individual characters and the remaining 10 images were comprised of multiple characters (N = 155). All images were independently analysed by two reviewers for apparent gender, age, ethnicity, skin tone, and body habitus. Discrepancies in responses were resolved by third-observer consensus. Results Collectively for DALL-E 3, 69.7% of pharmacists were depicted as men, 29.7% as women, 93.5% as a light skin tone, 6.5% as mid skin tone, and 0% as dark skin tone. The gender distribution was a statistically significant variation from that of actual Australian pharmacists (P < .001). Among the images of individual pharmacists, DALL-E 3 generated 100% as men and 100% were light skin tone. Conclusions This evaluation reveals the gender and ethnicity bias associated with generative AI text-to-image generation using DALL-E 3 among Australian pharmacists. Generated images have a disproportionately high representation of white men as pharmacists which is not representative of the diversity of pharmacists in Australia today.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference22 articles.

1. Australian community pharmacy service provision factors, stresses and strains: a qualitative study;Yong;Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm,2023

2. Public perception of pharmacists: film and television portrayals from 1970 to 2013;Yanicak;J Am Pharm Assoc,2015

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