Participation in the age of foundation models
Harini Suresh, Emily Tseng, Meg Young, Mary L. Gray, Emma Pierson,, Karen Levy

TL;DR
This paper explores participatory approaches for foundation models, proposing a multi-layer framework to enable marginalized communities to influence model development and application, addressing scale and context challenges.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multi-layer blueprint for participatory foundation models, including foundation, subfloor, and surface layers, to facilitate meaningful stakeholder engagement.
Findings
Developed a three-layer participatory framework for foundation models.
Case studies demonstrate improved stakeholder engagement in diverse domains.
Highlights the importance of local, application-oriented participation.
Abstract
Growing interest and investment in the capabilities of foundation models has positioned such systems to impact a wide array of public services. Alongside these opportunities is the risk that these systems reify existing power imbalances and cause disproportionate harm to marginalized communities. Participatory approaches hold promise to instead lend agency and decision-making power to marginalized stakeholders. But existing approaches in participatory AI/ML are typically deeply grounded in context - how do we apply these approaches to foundation models, which are, by design, disconnected from context? Our paper interrogates this question. First, we examine existing attempts at incorporating participation into foundation models. We highlight the tension between participation and scale, demonstrating that it is intractable for impacted communities to meaningfully shape a foundation…
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