Autonomous Driving and Perverse Incentives

2018 | journal article

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​Autonomous Driving and Perverse Incentives​
Loh, W. & Misselhorn, C. ​ (2018) 
Philosophy & Technology32(4) pp. 575​-590​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13347-018-0322-6 

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Authors
Loh, Wulf; Misselhorn, Catrin 
Abstract
This paper discusses the ethical implications of perverse incentives with regard to autonomous driving. We define perverse incentives as a feature of an action, technology, or social policy that invites behavior which negates the primary goal of the actors initiating the action, introducing a certain technology, or implementing a social policy. As a special form of means-end-irrationality, perverse incentives are to be avoided from a prudential standpoint, as they prove to be directly self-defeating: They are not just a form of unintended side effect that must be balanced against the main goal or value to be realized by an action, technology, or policy. Instead, they directly cause the primary goals of the actors—i.e., the goals that they ultimately pursue with the action, technology, or policy—to be “worse achieved” (Parfit). In this paper, we elaborate on this definition and distinguish three ideal-typical phases of adverse incentives, where only in the last one the threshold for a perverse incentive is crossed. In addition, we discuss different possible relevant actors and their goals in implementing autonomous vehicles. We conclude that even if some actors do not pursue traffic safety as their primary goal, as part of a responsibility network they incur the responsibility to act on the common primary goal of the network, which we argue to be traffic safety.
Issue Date
2018
Journal
Philosophy & Technology 
ISSN
2210-5433; 2210-5441
Language
English
Related Material
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/326417519_Autonomous_Driving_and_Perverse_Incentives
https://philpapers.org/rec/LOHADA
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13347-018-0322-6

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