Human Values for Smarter Cities. Designing Understandable Machine-Vision Systems in Public Spaces

DossierRAAK.PRO04.068
StatusLopend
Startdatum16 mei 2022
Einddatum15 mei 2026
RegelingRAAK-PRO
Thema's
  • Bètatechniek
  • Sociale Studies
  • Veiligheid - Data en intelligence
  • Gebouwde omgeving duurzaam en leefbaar
  • Sleuteltechnologieën en duurzame materialen
  • Veerkrachtige samenleving: in wijk, stad en regio

Smart city technologies, including artificial intelligence and computer vision, promise to bring a higher quality of life and more efficiently managed cities.
However, developers, designers, and professionals working in urban management have started to realize that implementing these technologies poses numerous ethical challenges. Policy papers now call for human and public values in tech development, ethics guidelines for trustworthy A.I., and cities for digital rights. In a democratic society, these technologies should be understandable for citizens (transparency) and open for scrutiny and critique (accountability).
When implementing such public values in smart city technologies, professionals face numerous knowledge gaps. Public administrators find it difficult to translate abstract values like transparency into concrete specifications to design new services. In the private sector, developers and designers still lack a ‘design vocabulary’ and exemplary projects that can inspire them to respond to transparency and accountability demands. Finally, both the public and private sectors see a need to include the public in the development of smart city technologies but haven’t found the right methods.
This proposal aims to help these professionals to develop an integrated, value-based and multi-stakeholder design approach for the ethical implementation of smart city technologies. It does so by setting up a research-through-design trajectory to develop a prototype for an ethical ‘scan car’, as a concrete and urgent example for the deployment of computer vision and algorithmic governance in public space.
Three (practical) knowledge gaps will be addressed. With civil servants at municipalities, we will create methods enabling them to translate public values such as transparency into concrete specifications and evaluation criteria. With designers, we will explore methods and patterns to answer these value-based requirements. Finally, we will further develop methods to engage civil society in this processes.

Contactinformatie

Hogeschool van Amsterdam

Dymph van Outersterp, contactpersoon
Telefoon: 020-5953328

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