Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12344
Title: Regulating human control over autonomous systems
Authors: Firlej, Mikolaj
Taeihagh, Araz 
Keywords: Artificial intelligence
Autonomous system
Autonomous vehicle
Autonomous weapon
Governance
Regulation
Issue Date: 17-Jun-2020
Publisher: Wiley
Citation: Firlej, Mikolaj, Taeihagh, Araz (2020-06-17). Regulating human control over autonomous systems. Regulation & Governance. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12344
Abstract: In recent years, many sectors have experienced significant progress in automation, associated with the growing advances in artificial intelligence and machine learning. There are already automated robotic weapons, which are able to evaluate and engage with targets on their own, and there are already autonomous vehicles that do not need a human driver. It is argued that the use of increasingly autonomous systems (AS) should be guided by the policy of human control, according to which humans should execute a certain significant level of judgment over AS. While in the military sector there is a fear that AS could mean that humans lose control over life and death decisions, in the transportation domain, on the contrary, there is a strongly held view that autonomy could bring significant operational benefits by removing the need for a human driver. This article explores the notion of human control in the United States in the two domains of defense and transportation. The operationalization of emerging policies of human control results in the typology of direct and indirect human controls exercised over the use of AS. The typology helps to steer the debate away from the linguistic complexities of the term “autonomy.” It identifies instead where human factors are undergoing important changes and ultimately informs about more detailed rules and standards formulation, which differ across domains, applications, and sectors.
Source Title: Regulation & Governance
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/171668
ISBN: 17485991
ISSN: 17485983
DOI: 10.1111/rego.12344
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