4.8 Article

Responsible artificial intelligence in agriculture requires systemic understanding of risks and externalities

Journal

NATURE MACHINE INTELLIGENCE
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 104-109

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42256-022-00440-4

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Funding

  1. Templeton World Charity Foundation

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The rapid advancement and adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies offer great potential for global agriculture. AI applications in agriculture can improve crop management and productivity. However, the risks associated with machine learning models, expert systems, and autonomous machines in agriculture are not well understood and appreciated.
Global agriculture is poised to benefit from the rapid advance and diffusion of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies. AI in agriculture could improve crop management and agricultural productivity through plant phenotyping, rapid diagnosis of plant disease, efficient application of agrochemicals and assistance for growers with location-relevant agronomic advice. However, the ramifications of machine learning (ML) models, expert systems and autonomous machines for farms, farmers and food security are poorly understood and under-appreciated. Here, we consider systemic risk factors of AI in agriculture. Namely, we review risks relating to interoperability, reliability and relevance of agricultural data, unintended socio-ecological consequences resulting from ML models optimized for yields, and safety and security concerns associated with deployment of ML platforms at scale. As a response, we suggest risk-mitigation measures, including inviting rural anthropologists and applied ecologists into the technology design process, applying frameworks for responsible and human-centred innovation, setting data cooperatives for improved data transparency and ownership rights, and initial deployment of agricultural AI in digital sandboxes. Machine learning applications in agriculture can bring many benefits in crop management and productivity. However, to avoid harmful effects of a new round of technological modernization, fuelled by AI, a thorough risk assessment is required, to review and mitigate risks such as unintended socio-ecological consequences and security concerns associated with applying machine learning models at scale.

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