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Auteurs principaux: Rizvi, Naba, Smith, Taggert, Vidyala, Tanvi, Bolds, Mya, Strickland, Harper, Begel, Andrew, Williams, Rua, Munyaka, Imani
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.12098
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author Rizvi, Naba
Smith, Taggert
Vidyala, Tanvi
Bolds, Mya
Strickland, Harper
Begel, Andrew
Williams, Rua
Munyaka, Imani
author_facet Rizvi, Naba
Smith, Taggert
Vidyala, Tanvi
Bolds, Mya
Strickland, Harper
Begel, Andrew
Williams, Rua
Munyaka, Imani
contents Human-like AI agents such as robots and chatbots are becoming increasingly popular, but they present a variety of ethical concerns. The first concern is in how we define humanness, and how our definition impacts communities historically dehumanized by scientific research. Autistic people in particular have been dehumanized by being compared to robots, making it even more important to ensure this marginalization is not reproduced by AI that may promote neuronormative social behaviors. Second, the ubiquitous use of these agents raises concerns surrounding model biases and accessibility. In our work, we investigate the experiences of the people who build and design these technologies to gain insights into their understanding and acceptance of neurodivergence, and the challenges in making their work more accessible to users with diverse needs. Even though neurodivergent individuals are often marginalized for their unique communication styles, nearly all participants overlooked the conclusions their end-users and other AI system makers may draw about communication norms from the implementation and interpretation of humanness applied in participants' work. This highlights a major gap in their broader ethical considerations, compounded by some participants' neuronormative assumptions about the behaviors and traits that distinguish "humans" from "bots" and the replication of these assumptions in their work. We examine the impact this may have on autism inclusion in society and provide recommendations for additional systemic changes towards more ethical research directions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_12098
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle "I Hadn't Thought About That": Creators of Human-like AI Weigh in on Ethics And Neurodivergence
Rizvi, Naba
Smith, Taggert
Vidyala, Tanvi
Bolds, Mya
Strickland, Harper
Begel, Andrew
Williams, Rua
Munyaka, Imani
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
68
Human-like AI agents such as robots and chatbots are becoming increasingly popular, but they present a variety of ethical concerns. The first concern is in how we define humanness, and how our definition impacts communities historically dehumanized by scientific research. Autistic people in particular have been dehumanized by being compared to robots, making it even more important to ensure this marginalization is not reproduced by AI that may promote neuronormative social behaviors. Second, the ubiquitous use of these agents raises concerns surrounding model biases and accessibility. In our work, we investigate the experiences of the people who build and design these technologies to gain insights into their understanding and acceptance of neurodivergence, and the challenges in making their work more accessible to users with diverse needs. Even though neurodivergent individuals are often marginalized for their unique communication styles, nearly all participants overlooked the conclusions their end-users and other AI system makers may draw about communication norms from the implementation and interpretation of humanness applied in participants' work. This highlights a major gap in their broader ethical considerations, compounded by some participants' neuronormative assumptions about the behaviors and traits that distinguish "humans" from "bots" and the replication of these assumptions in their work. We examine the impact this may have on autism inclusion in society and provide recommendations for additional systemic changes towards more ethical research directions.
title "I Hadn't Thought About That": Creators of Human-like AI Weigh in on Ethics And Neurodivergence
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
68
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.12098