Seite - 187 - in Pflegeroboter
Bild der Seite - 187 -
Text der Seite - 187 -
18710
Implementing Responsible Research …
and risk management. Physical risks posed by robots are well documented and standards
exist to help industry and developers to deal with these. BS 8611 therefore cites as “norma-
tive references” (section 2 of the standard) a set of existing standards in this area: BS EN
ISO 12100:2010, Safety of machinery—General principles for design—Risk assessment
and risk reduction (ISO 12100:2010); BS ISO 8373, Robots and robotic devices—Vocabu-
lary; BS ISO 31000, Risk management—Principles and guidelines.
Unlike the existing body of standardisation, the focus of BS 8611 is on “ethical
harm”. This is defined in section 3 (terms and definition) of the standard as “anything
likely to compromise psychological and/or societal and environmental well-being”. An
explanatory note elaborates that “Examples of ethical harm include stress, embarrass-
ment, anxiety, addiction, discomfort, deception, humiliation, being disregarded. This
might be experienced in relation to a person’s gender, race, religion, age, disability,
poverty or many other factors.” Ethical hazards are defined as sources of ethical harms
and ethical risks are said to be “probability of ethical harm occurring from the frequency
and severity of exposure to a hazard”. It is interesting to note that RRI is also defined in
the document as the “process that seeks to promote creativity and opportunities for sci-
ence and innovation that are socially desirable and undertaken in the public interest”.
The subsequent substantive sections of BS 8611 then follow the order of “ethical
risk assessment” (section 4), ethical guidelines and measures (section 5), ethics-related
system design recommendations (section 6), verification and validation (section 7) and
information for use (section 8).
The ethical risk assessment in section 4 starts with a table that lists ethical issues,
ethical hazards and ethical risks. For each of these there is a suggested mitigation,
space for comments and a validation mechanism. The ethical issues are the top level
concerns. They are broken down into societal, application, commercial/financial and
environmental. The largest group is that of societal issues. It includes the ethical issues
of loss of trust, intentional or unintentional deception, anthropomorphisation, privacy
and confidentiality, lack of respect for cultural diversity and pluralism, robot addic-
tion, and employment. Application issues listed are misuse, unsuitable divergent use,
dehumanisation of humans in the relationship with robots, inappropriate “trust” of
a human by a robot and self-learning systems exceeding its remit. Under commercial/
financial issues the BS document lists the appropriation of legal responsibility and autho-
rity, employment issues, equality of access, learning by robots that have some degree of
behavioural autonomy, and informed consent. The environmental issues section, finally
lists the hazards of environmental awareness (robots and appliances) and environmental
awareness (operations and applications).
The ethical risk column spells out how these hazards translate into ethical risks. In each
case this is followed by a suggested mitigation, comments and validation mechanisms.
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Pflegeroboter"