Uncovering Incentives for Implementing AI Governance Programs: Evidence From the Field

被引:0
|
作者
Gutierrez C.I. [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State University, Sandra Day o'Connor College of Law, Tempe, 85004, AZ
来源
关键词
Alignment of incentives; artificial intelligence (AI); governance of emerging technologies; soft law;
D O I
10.1109/TAI.2022.3171748
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Methods and applications of artificial intelligence (AI) are increasingly impacting society. To manage this technology's positive and negative effects, stakeholders (governments, firms, and nonprofits) are developing programs such as principles, guidelines, codes, certifications, and standards, among others, as an alternative to regulation or hard law. The literature classifies these programs as soft law, defined as any initiative that creates substantive expectations that are not directly enforced by government. Although these programs are incredibly flexible and can adapt to the constantly changing nature of emerging technologies, their main weakness is their voluntary nature. In other words, organizations are responsible for deciding if the implementation of soft law is in their best interests. The objective of this article is to inform stakeholders of the three incentives that motivate the enforcement or implementation of soft law and illustrate them with examples taken from an analysis of over 600 AI-centric programs. © 2020 IEEE.
引用
收藏
页码:792 / 798
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Governance by Glass-Box: Implementing Transparent Moral Bounds for AI Behaviour
    Tubella, Andrea Aler
    Theodorou, Andreas
    Dignum, Frank
    Dignum, Virginia
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE TWENTY-EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL JOINT CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 2019, : 5787 - 5793
  • [32] Implementing evidence based fall and fracture prevention programs
    Campbell, AJ
    JOURNAL OF AGING AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, 2004, 12 (03) : 402 - 402
  • [33] The changing effectiveness of financial incentives: Theory and evidence from residential solar rebate programs in California
    Sun, Bixuan
    Sankar, Ashwini
    ENERGY POLICY, 2022, 162
  • [34] The changing effectiveness of financial incentives: Theory and evidence from residential solar rebate programs in California
    Sun, Bixuan
    Sankar, Ashwini
    Energy Policy, 2022, 162
  • [35] The performance effect of feedback in a context of negative incentives: Evidence from a field experiment
    Lourenco, Sofia M.
    Greenberg, Jeffrey O.
    Littlefield, Melissa
    Bates, David W.
    Narayanan, V. G.
    MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2018, 40 : 1 - 14
  • [36] Do Incentives to Review Help the Market? Evidence from a Field Experiment on Airbnb
    Fradkin, Andrey
    Holtz, David
    MARKETING SCIENCE, 2023, 42 (05) : 853 - 865
  • [37] How monetary incentives improve outcomes in MOOCs: Evidence from a field experiment
    Gong, Jie
    Liu, Tracy Xiao
    Tang, Jie
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2021, 190 : 905 - 921
  • [38] Moral Suasion and Economic Incentives: Field Experimental Evidence from Energy Demand
    Ito, Koichiro
    Ida, Takanori
    Tanaka, Makoto
    AMERICAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL-ECONOMIC POLICY, 2018, 10 (01) : 240 - 267
  • [39] Prosocial behavior and incentives: Evidence from field experiments in rural Mexico and Tanzania
    Kerr, John
    Vardhan, Mamta
    Jindal, Rohit
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2012, 73 : 220 - 227
  • [40] Moral Incentives in Credit Card Debt Repayment: Evidence from a Field Experiment
    Bursztyn, Leonardo
    Fiorin, Stefano
    Gottlieb, Daniel
    Kanz, Martin
    JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2019, 127 (04) : 1641 - 1683