Autonomous systems - such as autonomous vehicles, medical systems and manufacturing and agricultural robots - promise to extend and expand human capacities. But their benefits will only be harnessed if people have trust in the human processes around their design, development, and deployment.

Enabling designers, engineers, developers, regulators, operators, and users to trace and allocate responsibility for the decisions, actions, failures, and outcomes of autonomous systems will be essential to this ecosystem of trust.

Who will benefit?

If a self-driving car takes an action that affects you, you will want to know who is responsible for it and what are the channels for redress. If you are a doctor using an autonomous system in a clinical setting, you will want to understand the distribution of accountability between you, the healthcare organisation, and the developers of the system. Designers and engineers need clarity about what responsibilities fall on them, and when these transfer to other agents in the decision-making network.

Manufacturers need to understand what they would be legally liable for. Mechanisms to achieve this transparency will not only provide all stakeholders with reassurance, they will also increase clarity, confidence, and competence amongst decision-makers.

Interdisciplinary working

This research project is both a multidisciplinary and an interdisciplinary programme of work - drawing on, and ultimately integrating, the disciplines of engineering, law, and philosophy - which will culminate in a methodology to achieve the tracing and allocation of responsibility for the decisions and outcomes of autonomous systems. By 'tracing responsibility' we mean the process of tracking the autonomous system's decisions or outcomes back to the decisions of designers, engineers, operators, or users, as far as this is possible - and understanding what led to the outcome.

By 'allocating responsibility' we mean both allocating role responsibilities to different agents across the lifecycle and working out in advance who would be legally liable and morally responsible for different system decisions and outcomes once they have occurred. This methodology will facilitate responsibility-by-design and responsibility-through-lifecycle.

In practice, the tracing and allocation of responsibility for the decisions and outcomes of autonomous systems is very complex. The technical complexity of the systems, organisational complexity and the complexity of the systems’ operational environments makes individual causal contributions difficult to distinguish. When this is combined with the fact that we delegate tasks to systems that require ethical judgement and lawful behaviour in human beings, it also gives rise to potential moral and legal responsibility gaps. The more complex and autonomous the system is, the more significant the role that assurance will play in tracing and allocating responsibility.

Types of responsibility

The project tackles these challenges head on. First, we clarify the fundamental concepts of responsibility, the different kinds of responsibility in play, the different agents involved, and where 'responsibility gaps' arise and how they can be addressed. Second, we build on techniques used in the technical assurance of high-risk systems to reason about responsibility in the context of uncertainty and dynamism, and therefore unpredictable socio-technical environments. Together, these strands of work provide the basis for a methodology for responsibility-by-design and responsibility-through-lifecycle that can be used in practice by a wide range of stakeholders.

Assurance of responsibility will be achieved that not only identifies which agents are responsible for which outcomes and in what way throughout the lifecycle, and explains how this identification is achieved, but also establishes why this tracing and allocation of responsibility is well-justified and complete.

Contact us

Professor Nick Pears

Professor Nick Pears

Deputy Head of Department (Research)

nick.pears@york.ac.uk

Contact us

Professor Nick Pears

Professor Nick Pears

Deputy Head of Department (Research)

nick.pears@york.ac.uk