Journal article
Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 2021
APA
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Winfield, A., Booth, S., Dennis, L., Egawa, T., Hastie, H. F., Jacobs, N., … Watson, E. (2021). IEEE P7001: A Proposed Standard on Transparency. Frontiers in Robotics and AI.
Chicago/Turabian
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Winfield, A., S. Booth, Louise Dennis, Takashi Egawa, Helen F. Hastie, Naomi Jacobs, R. I. Muttram, et al. “IEEE P7001: A Proposed Standard on Transparency.” Frontiers in Robotics and AI (2021).
MLA
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Winfield, A., et al. “IEEE P7001: A Proposed Standard on Transparency.” Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{a2021a,
title = {IEEE P7001: A Proposed Standard on Transparency},
year = {2021},
journal = {Frontiers in Robotics and AI},
author = {Winfield, A. and Booth, S. and Dennis, Louise and Egawa, Takashi and Hastie, Helen F. and Jacobs, Naomi and Muttram, R. I. and Olszewska, J. and Rajabiyazdi, Fahimeh and Theodorou, Andreas and Underwood, M. and Wortham, R. and Watson, Eleanor}
}
This paper describes IEEE P7001, a new draft standard on transparency of autonomous systems 1 . In the paper, we outline the development and structure of the draft standard. We present the rationale for transparency as a measurable, testable property. We outline five stakeholder groups: users, the general public and bystanders, safety certification agencies, incident/accident investigators and lawyers/expert witnesses, and explain the thinking behind the normative definitions of “levels” of transparency for each stakeholder group in P7001. The paper illustrates the application of P7001 through worked examples of both specification and assessment of fictional autonomous systems.