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Ambient Intelligence and Problems with Inferring Desires from Behaviour
Author(s) -
Johnny Soraker,
Phillip Brey
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
international review of information ethics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-5638
DOI - 10.29173/irie91
Subject(s) - ambient intelligence , presupposition , adaptation (eye) , focus (optics) , natural (archaeology) , human intelligence , relation (database) , psychology , computer science , reciprocal , social psychology , cognitive psychology , epistemology , human–computer interaction , artificial intelligence , philosophy , physics , archaeology , neuroscience , optics , history , linguistics , database
In this paper we will argue that many of the ethical problems raised by Ambient Intelligence stems from presupposing a behaviourist conception of the relation between human desires and behaviour. Insofar as Ambient Intelligence systems take overt, natural behaviour as input, they are likely to suffer from many of the same problems that have fuelled the widespread criticism of behaviourist explanations of human behav-iour. If these limitations of the technology are not sufficiently recognized, the technology is likely to be insuf-ficiently successful in supporting the needs and desires of human users. We will focus on four distinct chal-lenges that result from this behaviourist presupposition, all of which ought to be taken into consideration at the design stage: reciprocal adaptation, bias towards isolated use, culture-specific behaviour, and inability to manually configure the system. By considering these issues, our purpose is to raise awareness of the ethical problems that can arise because of intelligent user interfaces that rely on natural, overt behaviour.

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