{"title":"AI and elections: An introduction to the special issue","authors":"Biplav Srivastava, Anita Nikolich, Tarmo Koppel","doi":"10.1002/aaai.12110","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>A vibrant democracy relies on engaged voters making informed decisions about their representatives and keeping them accountable employing reliable information and secure election infrastructure. Significant and continuous effort is needed in improving a democracy and elections are a key part of that. Democracy at a practical level means empowering the voter with a right to choose and providing multiple capabilities, including knowledge about candidates, campaign finance, voting, processing votes, and so forth.</p><p>Artificial Intelligence and machine learning have transformed modern society. It also impacts how elections are conducted in democracies, with mixed outcomes. For example, digital marketing campaigns have enabled candidates to connect with voters at scale and communicate remotely during COVID-19, but there remains widespread concern about the spread of election disinformation as the result of AI-enabled bots and aggressive strategies.</p><p>In response, we conducted the first workshop at Neurips 2021 to examine the challenges of credible elections globally in an academic setting with apolitical discussion of significant issues. The speakers, panels, and reviewed papers discussed current and best practices in holding elections, tools available for candidates, and the experience of voters. They highlighted gaps and experience regarding AI-based interventions and methodologies. To ground the discussion, the invited speakers and panelists were drawn from three International geographies: US—representing one of the world's oldest democracies; India—representing the largest democracy in the world; and Estonia—representing a country using digital technologies extensively during elections and as a facet of daily life. The workshop had contributions on all technological and methodological aspects of elections and voting.</p><p>At AAAI 2023, we ran the second edition of the workshop. It focused on topics of interest to election candidates like organizing candidate campaigns and detecting, informing, and managing mis- and disinformation; for election organizers, identifying and validating voters and informing people about election information; for voters, knowing about election procedures, verifying individual and community votes, navigating candidates and issues; and cross-cutting.</p><p>Issues like promoting transparency in the election process, technology for data management and validation, and case studies of success or failure, and the reasons thereof. This time, additional speakers discussed experiences from Brazil, Canada, and Ireland. The workshop discussed AI trends, security gaps in elections and the lack of a standard secure stack to build trusted data-driven applications for elections, how AI and technology are already being used to make the election process work and how to improve, the role of journalists with AI and what policy steps are needed to adopt technology for a better-informed citizen.</p><p>This special issue on AI for elections highlights some of the insightful perspectives from the two workshops. This includes a review of AI and core electoral processes, how chatbots could be used to promote voter participation, understanding attempts for voter polarization, detecting election frauds, and a new form of voting for user surveys. We hope they promote more community engagement for a multi-disciplinary research collaboration between AI, security, journalism, political science, and law for democracies around the world.</p><p>The authors declare that there is no conflict.</p>","PeriodicalId":7854,"journal":{"name":"Ai Magazine","volume":"44 3","pages":"216-217"},"PeriodicalIF":2.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/aaai.12110","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ai Magazine","FirstCategoryId":"94","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aaai.12110","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"计算机科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A vibrant democracy relies on engaged voters making informed decisions about their representatives and keeping them accountable employing reliable information and secure election infrastructure. Significant and continuous effort is needed in improving a democracy and elections are a key part of that. Democracy at a practical level means empowering the voter with a right to choose and providing multiple capabilities, including knowledge about candidates, campaign finance, voting, processing votes, and so forth.
Artificial Intelligence and machine learning have transformed modern society. It also impacts how elections are conducted in democracies, with mixed outcomes. For example, digital marketing campaigns have enabled candidates to connect with voters at scale and communicate remotely during COVID-19, but there remains widespread concern about the spread of election disinformation as the result of AI-enabled bots and aggressive strategies.
In response, we conducted the first workshop at Neurips 2021 to examine the challenges of credible elections globally in an academic setting with apolitical discussion of significant issues. The speakers, panels, and reviewed papers discussed current and best practices in holding elections, tools available for candidates, and the experience of voters. They highlighted gaps and experience regarding AI-based interventions and methodologies. To ground the discussion, the invited speakers and panelists were drawn from three International geographies: US—representing one of the world's oldest democracies; India—representing the largest democracy in the world; and Estonia—representing a country using digital technologies extensively during elections and as a facet of daily life. The workshop had contributions on all technological and methodological aspects of elections and voting.
At AAAI 2023, we ran the second edition of the workshop. It focused on topics of interest to election candidates like organizing candidate campaigns and detecting, informing, and managing mis- and disinformation; for election organizers, identifying and validating voters and informing people about election information; for voters, knowing about election procedures, verifying individual and community votes, navigating candidates and issues; and cross-cutting.
Issues like promoting transparency in the election process, technology for data management and validation, and case studies of success or failure, and the reasons thereof. This time, additional speakers discussed experiences from Brazil, Canada, and Ireland. The workshop discussed AI trends, security gaps in elections and the lack of a standard secure stack to build trusted data-driven applications for elections, how AI and technology are already being used to make the election process work and how to improve, the role of journalists with AI and what policy steps are needed to adopt technology for a better-informed citizen.
This special issue on AI for elections highlights some of the insightful perspectives from the two workshops. This includes a review of AI and core electoral processes, how chatbots could be used to promote voter participation, understanding attempts for voter polarization, detecting election frauds, and a new form of voting for user surveys. We hope they promote more community engagement for a multi-disciplinary research collaboration between AI, security, journalism, political science, and law for democracies around the world.
期刊介绍:
AI Magazine publishes original articles that are reasonably self-contained and aimed at a broad spectrum of the AI community. Technical content should be kept to a minimum. In general, the magazine does not publish articles that have been published elsewhere in whole or in part. The magazine welcomes the contribution of articles on the theory and practice of AI as well as general survey articles, tutorial articles on timely topics, conference or symposia or workshop reports, and timely columns on topics of interest to AI scientists.