Conference Plenary Lecture

The Discovery of Graceful Extensibility Reframes the Pursuit of Autonomy and Addresses the Brittleness Problem

David Woods

Abstract

Since 1987 I have highlighted how attempts to deploy autonomous capabilities into complex, risky worlds of practice have been hampered by brittleness — descriptively, a sudden collapse in performance when events challenge system boundaries. This constraint has been downplayed on the grounds that the next advance in AI, algorithms, or control theory will lead to the deployment of systems that escape from brittle limits. However, the world keeps providing examples of brittle collapse such as the 2003 Columbia Space Shuttle accident or this years’ Texas energy collapse. Resilience Engineering, drawing on multiple sources including safety of complex systems, biological systems, & joint human-autonomy systems, discovered that (a) brittleness is a fundamental risk and (b) all adaptive systems develop means to mitigate that risk through sources for resilient performance.

The fundamental discovery, covering biological, cognitive, and human systems, is that all adaptive systems at all scales have to possess the capacity for graceful extensibility. Viability of a system, in the long run, requires the ability to gracefully extend or stretch at the boundaries as challenges occur. To put the constraint simply, viability requires extensibility, because all systems have limits and regularly experience surprise at those boundaries due to finite resources and continuous change (Woods, 2015; 2018; 2019).

The problem is that development of automata consistently ignores this constraint. As a result, we see repeated demonstrations of the empirical finding: systems-as-designed are more brittle than stakeholders realize, but fail less often as people in various roles adapt to fill shortfalls and stretch system performance in the face of smaller & larger surprises. (Some) people in some roles are the ad hoc source of the necessary graceful extensibility.

The promise comes from the science behind Resilience Engineering which highlights paths to build systems with graceful extensibility, especially systems that utilize new autonomous capabilities. Even better, designing systems with graceful extensibility draws on basic concepts in control engineering, though these are reframed substantially when combined with findings on adaptive systems from biology, cognitive work, organized complexity, and sociology.


Presenter

David Woods

Ohio State University
United States