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Blaming humans in autonomous vehicle accidents: Shared responsibility across levels of automation

Authors :
Awad, Edmond
Levine, Sydney
Kleiman-Weiner, Max
Dsouza, Sohan
Tenenbaum, Joshua B.
Shariff, Azim
Bonnefon, Jean-François
Rahwan, Iyad
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

When a semi-autonomous car crashes and harms someone, how are blame and causal responsibility distributed across the human and machine drivers? In this article, we consider cases in which a pedestrian was hit and killed by a car being operated under shared control of a primary and a secondary driver. We find that when only one driver makes an error, that driver receives the blame and is considered causally responsible for the harm, regardless of whether that driver is a machine or a human. However, when both drivers make errors in cases of shared control between a human and a machine, the blame and responsibility attributed to the machine is reduced. This finding portends a public under-reaction to the malfunctioning AI components of semi-autonomous cars and therefore has a direct policy implication: a bottom-up regulatory scheme (which operates through tort law that is adjudicated through the jury system) could fail to properly regulate the safety of shared-control vehicles; instead, a top-down scheme (enacted through federal laws) may be called for.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1803.07170
Document Type :
Working Paper