Chopra, Amit K. and Singh, Munindar P. (2021) Accountability as a Foundation for Requirements in Sociotechnical Systems. IEEE Internet Computing, 25 (6). pp. 33-41. ISSN 1089-7801
accountability.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial.
Download (149kB)
Abstract
We understand sociotechnical systems (STSs) as uniting social and technical tiers to provide abstractions for capturing how autonomous principals interact with each other. Accountability is a foundational concept in STSs and an essential component of achieving ethical outcomes. In simple terms, accountability involves identifying who can call whom to account and who must provide an accounting of what and when. Although accountability is essential in any application involving autonomous parties, established methods do not support it. We formulate an accountability requirement as one where one principal is accountable to another regarding some conditional expectation. Our metamodel for STSs captures accountability requirements as relational constructs inspired from legal concepts, such as commitments, authorization, and prohibition. We apply our metamodel to a healthcare process and show how it helps address the problems of ineffective interaction identified in the original case study.