English

AI and Identity

Computers and Society 2024-04-12 v2 Artificial Intelligence Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

AI-empowered technologies' impact on the world is undeniable, reshaping industries, revolutionizing how humans interact with technology, transforming educational paradigms, and redefining social codes. However, this rapid growth is accompanied by two notable challenges: a lack of diversity within the AI field and a widening AI divide. In this context, This paper examines the intersection of AI and identity as a pathway to understand biases, inequalities, and ethical considerations in AI development and deployment. We present a multifaceted definition of AI identity, which encompasses its creators, applications, and their broader impacts. Understanding AI's identity involves understanding the associations between the individuals involved in AI's development, the technologies produced, and the social, ethical, and psychological implications. After exploring the AI identity ecosystem and its societal dynamics, We propose a framework that highlights the need for diversity in AI across three dimensions: Creators, Creations, and Consequences through the lens of identity. This paper proposes the need for a comprehensive approach to fostering a more inclusive and responsible AI ecosystem through the lens of identity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.07924,
  title  = {AI and Identity},
  author = {Sri Yash Tadimalla and Mary Lou Maher},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.07924},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

10 pages, 4 figures, AAAI Spring Symposium

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:17:43.455Z