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Human oversight necessitates the maintenance of meaningful human involvement in the decision-making loop, particularly in high-stakes applications where the cost of error is significant
Reasoning
Mitigation name provided without definition or evidence; insufficient information to identify focal activity.
Fairness Metrics
robust fairness metrics, such as demographic parity and equalized odds, to rigorously evaluate and quantify a model's performance across different populations.
2.2.2 Testing & EvaluationSystematic Bias Auditing
The systematic auditing for and mitigation of these biases are not merely corrective measures but are fundamental to the system's legitimacy and social acceptance.
2.2.3 Auditing & ComplianceTransparency
Transparency refers to the degree to which the inner workings of an AI system: its data, algorithms, and models are accessible and comprehensible.
2.4.2 Design StandardsExplainability
Explainability, a related but distinct concept, pertains to the ability to furnish a clear, human-understandable rationale for a specific decision or prediction made by the system.
1.1.4 Model ArchitecturePost-hoc Interpretation Techniques
For complex, ‘black-box’ models like deep neural networks, achieving explainability requires the use of post-hoc interpretation techniques.
1.1.4 Model ArchitectureAccountability Structures
“Establishing accountability requires the creation of clear, pre-defined structures that assign responsibility for the system's behavior to specific human actors or organizational entities.”
2.1.2 Roles & AccountabilityEthical Imperatives in AI Design: A Comprehensive Framework for Risk Mitigation and Responsible Innovation
Tariq, Bilal; Ashraf, Muhammad Rehan; Rashid, Umar (2025)
As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly integral to critical sectors, the gap between abstract ethical principles and their concrete technical implementation presents a significant barrier to responsible innovation. This paper addresses this challenge by introducing a comprehensive framework designed to embed ethical considerations directly into the AI development lifecycle.
Other (multiple stages)
Applies across multiple lifecycle stages
Deployer
Entity that integrates and deploys the AI system for end users
Govern
Policies, processes, and accountability structures for AI risk management