Trust is a major aspect of the relationship between humans and autonomous safety-critical systems, such as autonomous vehicles. Although human errors may cause higher risks, failures of autonomous systems are more strongly perceived by the general population, which hinders the adoption of autonomous safety-critical systems. It is, therefore, necessary to devise approaches for systematically building trust in autonomous functions and thereby facilitate the adoption process. In this paper, we introduce a method and a framework for incremental building of trust in the context of autonomous driving. Within the envisioned solution, we employ the psychological narrative behind trust-building through the formation of new habits and we introduce a method where trust is established gradually for both the human and the autonomous safety-critical system via reputation building and step-by-step integration of smart software agents replacing human actions.
Fri 10 JulDisplayed time zone: (UTC) Coordinated Universal Time change
16:05 - 17:05 | A19-SEIS-Engineering an Inclusive SocietySoftware Engineering in Society at Baekje Chair(s): Iftekhar Ahmed University of California at Irvine, USA | ||
16:05 12mResearch paper | Debugging Hiring: What Went Right and What Went Wrong in the Technical Interview ProcessSEIS Software Engineering in Society Mahnaz (Mana) Behroozi NCSU, Shivani Shirolkar North Carolina State University, Titus Barik Microsoft, Chris Parnin North Carolina State University Pre-print | ||
16:17 6mShort-paper | From RE Cares to SE Cares: Software Engineering for Social Good, One Venue at a TimeSEIS Software Engineering in Society Alex Dekhtyar Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, Jane Hayes University of Kentucky, Jennifer Horkoff Chalmers and the University of Gothenburg, Gunter Mussbacher McGill University, Canada, Irit Hadar University of Haifa, Meira Levy Shenkar College of Engineering, Design, Art, Tingting Yu University of Kentucky, Jared Payne University of Kentucky, Barbara Paech University of Heidelberg, Germany, Kim Youngjoon J-CCEI, Jo Eunjung J-CCEI, Heo Seungbum J-CCEI, Kim Youngjoon J-CCEI, Kim Youngjoon J-CCEI, Kim Youngjoon J-CCEI | ||
16:23 6mShort-paper | Deep Learning for Smart Sewer Systems: Assessing Nonfunctional RequirementsSEIS Software Engineering in Society Hemanth Gudaparthi University of Cincinnati, Reese Johnson Metropolitan Sewer District of Greater Cincinnati, Harshitha Challa University of Cincinnati, Nan Niu University of Cincinnati | ||
16:29 12mTalk | Refactoring Community Smells in the Wild: The Practitioner’s Field ManualSEIS Software Engineering in Society Gemma Catolino Delft University of Technology, Fabio Palomba University of Salerno, Damian Andrew Tamburri TU/e, Alexander Serebrenik Eindhoven University of Technology, Filomena Ferrucci University of Salerno | ||
16:41 6mShort-paper | Building Trust in the UntrustableSEIS Software Engineering in Society Emilia Cioroaica Fraunhofer IESE, Barbora Buhnova Masaryk University, Thomas Kuhn , Daniel Schneider Fraunhofer IESE Pre-print | ||
16:47 6mShort-paper | Developing Software for Motivating Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities to do Outdoor Physical ActivitySEIS Software Engineering in Society Juan C Torrado Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Ida Wold Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Letizia Jaccheri Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Susanna Pelagatti University of Pisa, Stefano Chessa University of Pisa, Javier Gomez Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Gunnar Hartvigsen Arctic University of Norway, Henriette Michalsen Arctic University of Norway | ||
16:53 12mTalk | Designing Edutainment Software for Digital Skills Nurturing of Preschoolers. A Method Proposal.SEIS Software Engineering in Society Adriana-Mihaela Guran Department of Computer Science, Babes-Bolyai University, Grigoreta Sofia Cojocar Department of Computer Science, Babes-Bolyai University, Anamaria Moldovan Albinuta Kindergarten, Cluj-Napoca, Romania |