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CHI
2004
ACM

Affective sensors, privacy, and ethical contracts

14 years 12 months ago
Affective sensors, privacy, and ethical contracts
Sensing affect raises critical privacy concerns, which are examined here using ethical theory, and with a study that illuminates the connection between ethical theory and privacy. We take the perspective that affect sensing systems encode a designer's ethical and moral decisions: which emotions will be recognized, who can access recognition results, and what use is made of recognized emotions. Previous work on privacy has argued that users want feedback and control over such ethical choices. In response, we develop ethical contracts from the theory of contractualism, which grounds moral decisions on mutual agreement. Current findings indicate that users report significantly more respect for privacy in systems with an ethical contract when compared to a control. Author Keywords Affective Computing, Sensors, Privacy, Ethics, Emotion Recognition, Contractualism. ACM Classification Keywords H.5.2 [Information Interfaces and Presentation]: User Interfaces -- theory and methods; K.4.1 ...
Carson Reynolds, Rosalind W. Picard
Added 01 Dec 2009
Updated 01 Dec 2009
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where CHI
Authors Carson Reynolds, Rosalind W. Picard
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