Batya Friedman and David Hendry, faculty members in the UW Information School, have co-authored the new book 鈥
With technology affecting all aspects of life and the growing concerns over privacy, security and inclusion, the authors ask: 鈥淗ow should designers, engineers, architects, policymakers, and others design such technology? Who should be involved and what values are implicated?鈥
Value Sensitive design 鈥渂rings together theory, methods and applications for a design process that engages human values at every stage.鈥 And its methods, they write, 鈥渋n short, catalyze moral and technical imaginations for design and engineering.鈥
With heightened awareness of bias in artificial intelligence systems and its negative social and economic impacts, the authors add: 鈥淰alue sensitive design stands out as an approach that helps position engineers and technologists to get on the front end of these problems before systems are developed and deployed.鈥
The book offers 17 concrete methods for value sensitive design, they write, and demonstrates the effectiveness of the approach 鈥渢hrough case studies from large-scale public transportation to security for implantable medical devices.
Friedman and Hendry cite social media and artificial intelligence as examples of technologies that would benefit from value sensitive design. Social media companies, in favoring young adult users, 鈥渢end not to consider other key stakeholders such as children and the elderly,鈥 and AI systems are often inscrutable 鈥渂lack boxes鈥 of automatic decision making.
鈥淰alue sensitive design offers concrete approaches and methods for broadening the focus of AI systems, away from a singular focus on efficiency to responsible innovation and such values as fairness and lack of bias, diverse stakeholder inclusion, and most broadly social justice.鈥
鈥淰alue Sensitive Design: Shaping Technology with Moral Imagination鈥 was published in May by MIT Press.
For more information, contact Friedman at batya@uw.edu or Hendry at dhendry@uw.edu.