The ethics of AI decision-making: Balancing innovation and accountability

Apoorva Kasoju * and Tejavardhana Vishwakarma

1228 170TH ST SW, Unit A, Lynnwood, WA, 98037, USA.
 
Review
International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2024, 12(02), 3084–3095.
Article DOI: 10.30574/ijsra.2024.12.2.1548
Publication history: 
Received on 11 July 2024; revised on 17 August 2024; accepted on 20 August 2024
 
Abstract: 
Attention from public domains and academic circles has intensified due to the way AI systems' decision-making enters various societal structures of healthcare, criminal justice, finance, and autonomous technologies. This paper explores how technology innovation and accountability aspects interlock in AI decision-making systems through examination of ethical structures together with regulatory voids and problems resulting from AI system implementations. The paper examines the decision-making processes of present AI systems while exploring auditability together with Explainability measures and determining liability when mistakes or discriminatory operations occur.
The paper employs three case examples from facial identification systems, predictive crime analysis, and medical technology to prove how unrestrained development methods could sustain discrimination patterns while breaking public confidence. We present an ethical AI governance framework which depends on making the system visible and requiring human intervention together with consideration of specific circumstances. The study finds that ethical development of AI systems demands more than performance and efficiency since it requires the implementation of legally enforceable social accountability mechanisms. Social and economic systems require immediate mutual effort to develop AI systems that support human values and democratic principles.
 
Keywords: 
Artificial Intelligence (Ai); Ethical Decision Making; Algorithmic Accountability; Ai Governance; Transparency.
 
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