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Running with Scissors: AI and the Race for the Future

Running with Scissors: AI and the Race for the Future

The race to develop and deploy AI has led innovation to outpace ethical inquiry. As part of our AI Ethics Docuseries, this documentary explores the risks of prioritizing speed over responsibility and the ethical safeguards that can ensure a better future for humanity.

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Implicit Bias & Wrongful Conviction

Implicit Bias & Wrongful Conviction

“Implicit bias” exists when we unconsciously hold attitudes or judgments about other people or social groups. In the criminal legal system, implicit bias creates an unacceptable risk of wrongful conviction for people of color. This video is a collaboration between Ethics Unwrapped and Illinois Innocence Project.

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Intro to Behavioral Ethics: Sports Edition

Intro to Behavioral Ethics: Sports Edition

Outside pressures, internal biases, decision-making shortcuts, and other factors can lead us to make unethical choices. As research in sports psychology has improved athletic performance, research in behavioral ethics can improve our moral performance.

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Tangible & Abstract: Sports Edition

Tangible & Abstract: Sports Edition

We tend to be more strongly influenced by what is happening here and now. We often fail to consider the consequences of our choices for the future or the impact of our actions on those we don’t know.

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Role Morality: Sports Edition

Role Morality: Sports Edition

Our moral standards are often determined by the role we see ourselves playing at the time. This can lead us to make decisions and act very differently in the moral realm depending on our role.

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Overconfidence Bias: Sports Edition

Overconfidence Bias: Sports Edition

Athletes – like everyone else – are overconfident in their abilities. It can be counterproductive to be overconfident about our athletic ability, but overconfidence in our morality can cause us to act without any real ethical reflection.

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Obedience to Authority: Sports Edition

Obedience to Authority: Sports Edition

We have a natural tendency to want to please those in charge. Athletes especially have a self-serving incentive to follow their coaches’ instructions. This makes it easy to rationalize unethical behavior as simply “doing as we’re told.”

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Loss Aversion: Sports Edition

Loss Aversion: Sports Edition

We tend to detest losses much more than we enjoy wins. This means we are more likely to act unethically to avoid losing something we already have, like a spot on the team, than we would to gain it in the first place.

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Incrementalism: Sports Edition

Incrementalism: Sports Edition

Small incremental changes in our behavior can lead us to unconsciously lower our ethical standards over time. Doing something bad one time makes it easier to rationalize our actions the next time we act unethically.

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