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When Is It Acceptable to Break the Rules? Knowledge Representation of Moral Judgement Based on Empirical Data (2201.07763v1)

Published 19 Jan 2022 in cs.AI and cs.CY

Abstract: One of the most remarkable things about the human moral mind is its flexibility. We can make moral judgments about cases we have never seen before. We can decide that pre-established rules should be broken. We can invent novel rules on the fly. Capturing this flexibility is one of the central challenges in developing AI systems that can interpret and produce human-like moral judgment. This paper details the results of a study of real-world decision makers who judge whether it is acceptable to break a well-established norm: no cutting in line.'' We gather data on how human participants judge the acceptability of line-cutting in a range of scenarios. Then, in order to effectively embed these reasoning capabilities into a machine, we propose a method for modeling them using a preference-based structure, which captures a novel modification to standarddual process'' theories of moral judgment.

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Authors (9)
  1. Edmond Awad (11 papers)
  2. Sydney Levine (12 papers)
  3. Andrea Loreggia (20 papers)
  4. Nicholas Mattei (51 papers)
  5. Iyad Rahwan (56 papers)
  6. Francesca Rossi (55 papers)
  7. Kartik Talamadupula (38 papers)
  8. Joshua Tenenbaum (36 papers)
  9. Max Kleiman-Weiner (20 papers)
Citations (6)

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