Surveys Considered Harmful? Reflecting on the Use of Surveys in AI Research, Development, and Governance
Calls for engagement with the public in Artificial Intelligence (AI) research, development, and governance are increasing, leading to the use of surveys to capture people's values, perceptions, and experiences related to AI. In this paper, we critically examine the state of human participant su...
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
26.07.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Calls for engagement with the public in Artificial Intelligence (AI)
research, development, and governance are increasing, leading to the use of
surveys to capture people's values, perceptions, and experiences related to AI.
In this paper, we critically examine the state of human participant surveys
associated with these topics. Through both a reflexive analysis of a survey
pilot spanning six countries and a systematic literature review of 44 papers
featuring public surveys related to AI, we explore prominent perspectives and
methodological nuances associated with surveys to date. We find that public
surveys on AI topics are vulnerable to specific Western knowledge, values, and
assumptions in their design, including in their positioning of ethical concepts
and societal values, lack sufficient critical discourse surrounding deployment
strategies, and demonstrate inconsistent forms of transparency in their
reporting. Based on our findings, we distill provocations and heuristic
questions for our community, to recognize the limitations of surveys for
meeting the goals of engagement, and to cultivate shared principles to design,
deploy, and interpret surveys cautiously and responsibly. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.01458 |