6533b7d4fe1ef96bd126202e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

How to Write Ethical User Stories? : Impacts of the ECCOLA Method

Rebekah RousiPekka AbrahamssonJoni KultanenKai-kristian KemellErika HalmeMarianna JantunenVille Vakkuri

subject

0303 health sciencesKnowledge managementComputer sciencebusiness.industryUser storyControl (management)ohjelmistotuotanto020207 software engineering02 engineering and technologyAi ethicstekoälyeettisyysSystem requirementsketterät menetelmät03 medical and health sciencesWorkflowSoftware0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringWeb applicationbusinessohjelmistokehitys030304 developmental biologyAgile software development

description

AbstractArtificial Intelligence (AI) systems are increasing in significance within software services. Unfortunately, these systems are not flawless. Their faults, failures and other systemic issues have emphasized the urgency for consideration of ethical standards and practices in AI engineering. Despite the growing number of studies in AI ethics, comparatively little attention has been placed on how ethical issues can be mitigated in software engineering (SE) practice. Currently understanding is lacking regarding the provision of useful tools that can help companies transform high-level ethical guidelines for AI ethics into the actual workflow of developers. In this paper, we explore the idea of using user stories to transform abstract ethical requirements into tangible outcomes in Agile software development. We tested this idea by studying master’s level student projects (15 teams) developing web applications for a real industrial client over the course of five iterations. These projects resulted in 250+ user stories that were analyzed for the purposes of this paper. The teams were divided into two groups: half of the teams worked using the ECCOLA method for AI ethics in SE, while the other half, a control group, was used to compare the effectiveness of ECCOLA. Both teams were tasked with writing user stories to formulate customer needs into system requirements. Based on the data, we discuss the effectiveness of ECCOLA, and Primary Empirical Contributions (PECs) from formulating ethical user stories in Agile development.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202106183857