Description
The number of older adults living independently at home is expanding, which is often said to bring the need for more technological assistance. Dutch policy aims to allow older adults to remain living at home as long as possible. In such policies, the use of technologies support older adults to perform daily practices. Artificial Intelligence (AI), as part of these technologies, has the potential to improve personalized care and ageing in place.The internal machineries of AI systems often remain hidden as a black-box. Interest in eXplainable AI (XAI) originate from this black-boxing. XAI should assist users in understanding the underlying logic of the decision-making process, and in identifying mistakes. It is unknown how various stakeholders understand AI, and what value do they see in XAI.
We conducted 21 scenario-based interviews to investigated XAI in care. We aimed to understand ‘what is XAI’ in the worlds of different stakeholders and the different enactments of XAI that become visible in their practices.
Preliminary findings show that XAI sounds simple, but seems more difficult in practice. Stakeholders express different meanings and necessities of XAI. This varies from knowledge of algorithms or data specific knowledge towards practical understanding.
In care of older adults, trust and willingness to use AI are essential. The needed level of explainability differs according to different stakeholders. As a follow-up, we recommend research into the enactment of XAI in practice, and the form or degree of XAI needed and for whom.
Period | 4 Jul 2024 |
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Event title | British Society of Gerontology: 53rd Annual Conference |
Event type | Conference |
Location | Newcastle, United KingdomShow on map |
Degree of Recognition | International |