Buch, Englisch, 506 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 235 mm
Buch, Englisch, 506 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 235 mm
ISBN: 978-0-443-40553-2
Verlag: Elsevier Science
Bi-directionality in Human-AI Collaborative Systems investigates the foundations, metrics, and applications of human-machine systems, along with the legal ramifications of autonomy, including standards, trust by the public, and bidirectional trust by users and AI systems. The book addresses the challenges in creating synergistic human and AI-based autonomous system-of-systems by focusing on the underlying challenges associated with bi-directionality. Chapters cover advances in LLMs, logic, machine learning choices, the development of standards, as well as human-centered approaches to autonomous human-machine teams. This is a valuable resource for world-class researchers and engineers who are theorizing on, designing, and developing autonomous systems.
It will also be useful for government scientists, business leaders, social scientists, philosophers, regulators and legal experts interested in the impact of autonomous human-machine teams and systems.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1 Introduction to bidirectionality in human-AI collaborative systems
Chapter 2 Foundational approaches to post-hoc explainability for image classification
Chapter 3 Explaining poisoned AI models
Chapter 4 Desirability vs. feasibility: a research through design inquiry of explainable AI
Chapter 5 Credition, uncertainty, consciousness, and communication
Chapter 6 On the principles and effectiveness of gamification in bidirectional artificial intelligence and explainable AI
Chapter 7 Employing Kolmogorov-Arnold network for man-machine collaboration
Chapter 8 Collaborative communication for unnamable risks: a creative writing approach to aligning human-machine situation models in an open world
Chapter 9 Not all explanations are created equal: investigating the pitfalls of current XAI evaluation
Chapter 10 A mixture-of-experts flock: examining expert influence
Chapter 11 On replacing humans with human simulators in human-in-the-loop systems built to interact with humans
Chapter 12 Addressing procrastination and improving task completion efficiency through agent-based interventions
Chapter 13 Navigating the sociotechnical labyrinth: dynamic certification for responsible embodied AI
Chapter 14 Searching XAI collaborating with manager: bidirectional learning for human-tech applications
Chapter 15 Natural perception-based control types for human/machine systems
Chapter 16 Hybrid forums as a means to perceive bidirectional risks
Chapter 17 Credit assignment: challenges and opportunities in developing human-like learning agents
Chapter 18 Human-machine teams: advantages afforded by the quantum-likeness of interdependence