Position: Multi-Agent Algorithmic Care Systems Demand Contestability for Trustworthy AI

arXiv cs.AI / 2026/3/24

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要点

  • The paper argues that multi-agent systems in healthcare require “contestability” to support trustworthy decision-making beyond what explainability alone can provide.
  • It claims current trustworthy AI and explainable AI approaches do not adequately let care partners challenge, correct, or override multi-agent outputs during the full decision lifecycle.
  • Contestable AI (CAI) is proposed as a design characterization that combines transparency with structured opportunities for human intervention and mechanisms for review and correction.
  • The position outlines key limitations in existing MAS and XAI research and presents a human-in-the-loop framework using structured argumentation and role-based contestation to preserve human agency and clinical responsibility.

Abstract

Multi-agent systems (MAS) are increasingly used in healthcare to support complex decision-making through collaboration among specialized agents. Because these systems act as collective decision-makers, they raise challenges for trust, accountability, and human oversight. Existing approaches to trustworthy AI largely rely on explainability, but explainability alone is insufficient in multi-agent settings, as it does not enable care partners to challenge or correct system outputs. To address this limitation, Contestable AI (CAI) characterizes systems that support effective human challenge throughout the decision-making lifecycle by providing transparency, structured opportunities for intervention, and mechanisms for review, correction, or override. This position paper argues that contestability is a necessary design requirement for trustworthy multi-agent algorithmic care systems. We identify key limitations in current MAS and Explainable AI (XAI) research and present a human-in-the-loop framework that integrates structured argumentation and role-based contestation to preserve human agency, clinical responsibility, and trust in high-stakes care contexts.