How research literature and media cover the role and image of disabled people in relation to artiBicial intelligence and neuro-research
Abstract
Disabled people are impacted by ArtiBicial Intelligence including Machine Learning linked neuro and brain based scientiBic and technological advancements. How disabled people are portrayed and what role is linked to disabled people in AI/Neuro discourses impacts how AI/Neuro are advanced in relation to disabled people. A content analysis was performed on 786 academic abstracts obtained from Scopus and the 70 databases of EBSCO-HOST, 208 Canadian newspaper articles and 286 tweets. Within the academic literature, Canadian newspapers and tweets covered, the main portrayal of disabled people was a medical or deBiciency one, and the main roles of disabled people evident were the ones of being a medical/ therapeutic user and medical focused research participant of AI/Neuro advancements. The following roles were not present: “victim” of AI/Neuro advancements; “educator”, advocate”, or “knowledge producers” on the social and other implications of AI/Neuro, and “stakeholder”. No role was linked to AI/Neuro governance, ethics and policy discourses. The limited scope of roles of disabled people in the AI/Neuro literature covered and the medically slated portrayal of disabled people revealed decreases the utility of how AI/Neuro advancements are discussed, especially the AI/Neuro ethics and governance discourses.