Visible to the public Enabling Trust in Autonomous Human-Machine Teaming

TitleEnabling Trust in Autonomous Human-Machine Teaming
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsHou, Ming
Conference Name2021 IEEE International Conference on Autonomous Systems (ICAS)
Keywordsautonomous systems, Conferences, Human Behavior, human factors, Human intelligence, human trust, human-autonomy teaming, human-machine symbiosis technology, interaction-centered design, Pandemics, Productivity, pubcrawl, security, Symbiosis, Trust
AbstractThe advancement of AI enables the evolution of machines from relatively simple automation to completely autonomous systems that augment human capabilities with improved quality and productivity in work and life. The singularity is near! However, humans are still vulnerable. The COVID-19 pandemic reminds us of our limited knowledge about nature. The recent accidents involving Boeing 737 Max passengers ring the alarm again about the potential risks when using human-autonomy symbiosis technologies. A key challenge of safe and effective human-autonomy teaming is enabling "trust" between the human-machine team. It is even more challenging when we are facing insufficient data, incomplete information, indeterministic conditions, and inexhaustive solutions for uncertain actions. This calls for the imperative needs of appropriate design guidance and scientific methodologies for developing safety-critical autonomous systems and AI functions. The question is how to build and maintain a safe, effective, and trusted partnership between humans and autonomous systems. This talk discusses a context-based and interaction-centred design (ICD) approach for developing a safe and collaborative partnership between humans and technology by optimizing the interaction between human intelligence and AI. An associated trust model IMPACTS (Intention, Measurability, Performance, Adaptivity, Communications, Transparency, and Security) will also be introduced to enable the practitioners to foster an assured and calibrated trust relationship between humans and their partner autonomous systems. A real-world example of human-autonomy teaming in a military context will be explained to illustrate the utility and effectiveness of these trust enablers.
DOI10.1109/ICAS49788.2021.9551153
Citation Keyhou_enabling_2021