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Results for "trust in AI"

Towards trustworthy generative AI

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI faculty Kun Zhang is researching methods to improve the reliability of generative AI, particularly in healthcare applications. Current generative AI models often act as "black boxes," making it difficult to understand why a specific result was produced. Zhang's research focuses on incorporating causal relationships into AI systems to ensure more accurate and meaningful information. Why it matters: Improving the trustworthiness of generative AI is crucial for sensitive sectors like healthcare and ensuring responsible AI deployment across the region.

Towards Trustworthy AI: From High-dimensional Statistics to Causality

MBZUAI ·

Dr. Xinwei Sun from Microsoft Research Asia presented research on trustworthy AI, focusing on statistical learning with theoretical guarantees. The work covers methods for sparse recovery with false-discovery rate analysis and causal inference tools for robustness and explainability. Consistency and identifiability were addressed theoretically, with applications shown in medical imaging analysis. Why it matters: The research contributes to addressing key limitations of current AI models regarding explainability, reproducibility, robustness, and fairness, which are crucial for real-world applications in sensitive fields like healthcare.

AraTrust: An Evaluation of Trustworthiness for LLMs in Arabic

arXiv ·

The paper introduces AraTrust, a new benchmark for evaluating the trustworthiness of LLMs when prompted in Arabic. The benchmark contains 522 multiple-choice questions covering dimensions like truthfulness, ethics, safety, and fairness. Experiments using AraTrust showed that GPT-4 performed the best, while open-source models like AceGPT 7B and Jais 13B had lower scores. Why it matters: This benchmark addresses a critical gap in evaluating LLMs for Arabic, which is essential for ensuring the safe and ethical deployment of AI in the Arab world.

Trustworthiness Assurance for Autonomous Software Systems in the AI Era

MBZUAI ·

Dr. Youcheng Sun from the University of Manchester presented on ensuring the trustworthiness of AI systems using formal verification, software testing, and explainable AI. He discussed applying these techniques to challenges like copyright protection for AI models. Dr. Sun's research has been funded by organizations including Google, Ethereum Foundation, and the UK’s Defence Science and Technology Laboratory. Why it matters: As AI adoption grows in the GCC, ensuring the safety, dependability, and trustworthiness of these systems is crucial for public trust and responsible innovation.

On attitudes toward artificial intelligence: an individual differences perspective

MBZUAI ·

Christian Montag from Ulm University gave a talk about assessing attitudes towards AI, covering the IMPACT framework (Modality, Person, Area, Country/Culture, and Transparency). He discussed how factors like age, gender, personality, and culture relate to attitudes toward AI, and how those attitudes link to trust in automation and specific AI models like ChatGPT and Ernie Bot. Montag's research explores the intersection of psychology, neuroscience, behavioral economics, and computer science, focusing on the impact of AI on the human mind. Why it matters: Understanding public perception of AI is crucial for responsible development and deployment, especially in the Arab world where cultural and demographic factors can significantly shape attitudes.