478 research outputs found
Human participants in AI research: Ethics and transparency in practice
In recent years, research involving human participants has been critical to
advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML),
particularly in the areas of conversational, human-compatible, and cooperative
AI. For example, around 12% and 6% of publications at recent AAAI and NeurIPS
conferences indicate the collection of original human data, respectively. Yet
AI and ML researchers lack guidelines for ethical, transparent research
practices with human participants. Fewer than one out of every four of these
AAAI and NeurIPS papers provide details of ethical review, the collection of
informed consent, or participant compensation. This paper aims to bridge this
gap by exploring normative similarities and differences between AI research and
related fields that involve human participants. Though psychology,
human-computer interaction, and other adjacent fields offer historic lessons
and helpful insights, AI research raises several specific
concerns\unicode{x2014}namely, participatory design, crowdsourced dataset
development, and an expansive role of corporations\unicode{x2014}that
necessitate a contextual ethics framework. To address these concerns, this
paper outlines a set of guidelines for ethical and transparent practice with
human participants in AI and ML research. These guidelines can be found in
Section 4 on pp. 4\unicode{x2013}7
Phenotype Extraction: Estimation and Biometrical Genetic Analysis of Individual Dynamics
Within-person data can exhibit a virtually limitless variety of statistical patterns, but it can be difficult to distinguish meaningful features from statistical artifacts. Studies of complex traits have previously used genetic signals like twin-based heritability to distinguish between the two. This dissertation is a collection of studies applying state-space modeling to conceptualize and estimate novel phenotypic constructs for use in psychiatric research and further biometrical genetic analysis. The aims are to: (1) relate control theoretic concepts to health-related phenotypes; (2) design statistical models that formally define those phenotypes; (3) estimate individual phenotypic values from time series data; (4) consider hierarchical methods for biometrical genetic analysis of individual phenotypic variation
The Importance of Inclusive Spaces in Social Skills Development: Drawing on the LGBTQ Educational and Disability Studies in Education Frameworks
This manuscript highlights a major finding from a larger study conducted in the United States that used phenomenological interviews with adults with autism who typed to communicate. Participants shared their United States educational experiences before and after learning to type. This finding focused on how disability studies in education and the development of inclusive spaces, such as those designed for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transexual, and queer or questioning (LGBTQ) students, may change the way in which educators support students with autism in developing and sustaining natural and meaningful friendships. Thus, this paper examined the social experiences of one participant who had an inclusive education from preschool through college graduation, and whose experience with participation in a social club, described as an acceptance coalition for the LGBTQ community, can influence the way in which educators provide support for building relationships with peers beginning in the elementary school setting
Adaptive Synaptic Failure Enables Sampling from Posterior Predictive Distributions in the Brain
Bayesian interpretations of neural processing require that biological
mechanisms represent and operate upon probability distributions in accordance
with Bayes' theorem. Many have speculated that synaptic failure constitutes a
mechanism of variational, i.e., approximate, Bayesian inference in the brain.
Whereas models have previously used synaptic failure to sample over uncertainty
in model parameters, we demonstrate that by adapting transmission probabilities
to learned network weights, synaptic failure can sample not only over model
uncertainty, but complete posterior predictive distributions as well. Our
results potentially explain the brain's ability to perform probabilistic
searches and to approximate complex integrals. These operations are involved in
numerous calculations, including likelihood evaluation and state value
estimation for complex planning.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:2111.0978
Recent Paleoanthropological Excavations of In Situ Deposits at Makapansgat, South Africa – A First Report
The Makapansgat Limeworks is a significant Pliocene site both for its sample of 35
hominin fossils as well as its wealth of fossil fauna. The lithological and paleontological
successions reveal local environmental changes that are important for understanding
the context of hominin evolution in southern Africa. Yet most of the site’s fossils were
found in dumps left behind by quarry operations, and the paleoecological interpretations
rest upon debatable assumptions about the original fossil provenience. We have recently
initiated systematic paleoanthropological excavations at Makapansgat to recover
well provenanced fossils in order to: 1) assess whether faunal successions are discernable
in the Makapansgat sequence; 2) assist environmental interpretations of the site;
3) and potentially recover the oldest hominins in South Africa, roughly coincident with
Australopithecus afarensis in East Africa. This paper presents a summary of our current
paleoenvironmental research at the Limeworks and preliminary results of ongoing
in situ excavations
Synthesis, structure and anti-fungal activity of dimeric Ag(I) complexes containing bis-imidazole ligands
Five Ag(I) complexes containing the ligands bis(imidazol-2-yl)methane (2-BIM) and its derivatives were prepared and [Ag2(2-BIM)2](ClO4)2 and [Ag2(2-BIM(Bz)OH)2](ClO4)2 EtOH were characterised using X-ray crystallography. In each dimer the two Ag(I) ions are two-coordinate and there are small but definite argentophilic Ag-Ag (d10-d10) interactions. All of the complexes display anti-fungal activity when tested in vitro against the fungal pathogen Candida albicans
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