SOTAVerified

Explainable artificial intelligence

XAI refers to methods and techniques in the application of artificial intelligence (AI) such that the results of the solution can be understood by humans. It contrasts with the concept of the "black box" in machine learning where even its designers cannot explain why an AI arrived at a specific decision. XAI may be an implementation of the social right to explanation. XAI is relevant even if there is no legal right or regulatory requirement—for example, XAI can improve the user experience of a product or service by helping end users trust that the AI is making good decisions. This way the aim of XAI is to explain what has been done, what is done right now, what will be done next and unveil the information the actions are based on. These characteristics make it possible (i) to confirm existing knowledge (ii) to challenge existing knowledge and (iii) to generate new assumptions.

Papers

Showing 4150 of 971 papers

TitleStatusHype
Explainable AI for Bioinformatics: Methods, Tools, and ApplicationsCode1
Collision Probability Distribution Estimation via Temporal Difference LearningCode1
Axiomatic Attribution for Deep NetworksCode1
A Wearable Device Dataset for Mental Health Assessment Using Laser Doppler Flowmetry and Fluorescence Spectroscopy SensorsCode1
BASED-XAI: Breaking Ablation Studies Down for Explainable Artificial IntelligenceCode1
Explaining Black-Box Models through CounterfactualsCode1
Calibrated Explanations: with Uncertainty Information and CounterfactualsCode1
Calibrated Explanations for RegressionCode1
ExpPoint-MAE: Better interpretability and performance for self-supervised point cloud transformersCode1
ContrXT: Generating Contrastive Explanations from any Text ClassifierCode1
Show:102550
← PrevPage 5 of 98Next →

No leaderboard results yet.