Investigating and Designing for Trust in AI-powered Code Generation Tools

May 18, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Conference on Fairness, Accountability and Transparency

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Authors Ruotong Wang, Ruijia Cheng, Denae Ford, Thomas Zimmermann arXiv ID 2305.11248 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.SE Citations 94 Venue Conference on Fairness, Accountability and Transparency Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
As AI-powered code generation tools such as GitHub Copilot become popular, it is crucial to understand software developers' trust in AI tools -- a key factor for tool adoption and responsible usage. However, we know little about how developers build trust with AI, nor do we understand how to design the interface of generative AI systems to facilitate their appropriate levels of trust. In this paper, we describe findings from a two-stage qualitative investigation. We first interviewed 17 developers to contextualize their notions of trust and understand their challenges in building appropriate trust in AI code generation tools. We surfaced three main challenges -- including building appropriate expectations, configuring AI tools, and validating AI suggestions. To address these challenges, we conducted a design probe study in the second stage to explore design concepts that support developers' trust-building process by 1) communicating AI performance to help users set proper expectations, 2) allowing users to configure AI by setting and adjusting preferences, and 3) offering indicators of model mechanism to support evaluation of AI suggestions. We gathered developers' feedback on how these design concepts can help them build appropriate trust in AI-powered code generation tools, as well as potential risks in design. These findings inform our proposed design recommendations on how to design for trust in AI-powered code generation tools.
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