Notice Given to Parents: Researchers Wanted Preschool Teachers to Wear Cameras to Record Everything They Saw From a First-Person Perspective, Including The Children They Were Teaching, to Train AI.
Notice Given to Parents: Researchers Wanted Preschool Teachers to Wear Cameras to Record Everything They Saw From a First-Person Perspective, Including The Children They Were Teaching, to Train AI.
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Al Processing and Data Security
Video data may be processed using cloud-based Al services. These services are accessed through restricted, authenticated API credentials and are governed by commercial data processing agreements that prohibit the use of submitted data for model training or product improvement. The specific Al tools and models used may evolve over the course of the study as technology advances; any such tools will be subject to equivalent or stronger data protection commitments. These tools do not publicly share, post, or reuse your child's data for any reason. Data may be retained by the provider for a limited period (e.g., up to 55 days) solely for internal monitoring, after which it is deleted. All video data is stored and managed in accordance with University of Washington data security policies.
Only authorized research team members and individuals from the UW or other agencies that may need to audit study records will be given access to identifiable video data. All activities comply with UW Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval and applicable FERPA regulations.
Video recordings of your child will never be posted online, shared publicly, or used for marketing. They are only for the research purposes described above. However, it is possible that someone who is not authorized to view the videos or study data will accidentally gain access to them despite our best efforts to protect your child's privacy.
Research staff are required by Washington State law to report any evidence of child abuse or neglect to the appropriate authorities.
The information that we obtain from your child for this study might be used for future studies. We may remove anything that might identify your child from the information. If we do so, the information may then be used for future research studies or given to another investigator without getting additional permission from you. It is also possible that in the future we may want to use or share study information that might identify your child. If we do, a review board will decide whether or not we need to get additional permission from you.
Your Rights
- Participation is completely voluntary. You may decline or withdraw your child from the research at any time. Your decision will not affect your child's enrollment or standing in the program.
- If you change your mind, simply let the teacher or research team know, and we will remove any recordings that include your child. Please note that if recordings have already been used in Al model training or grouped with other data prior to your withdrawal request, it may not be possible to remove your child's data**.
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The document present participation as "completely voluntary" despite relying on an opt-out rather than an opt-in model. This raised logistical concerns among parents, with one noting they only discovered through questioning that opted-out children would wear stickers, leaving it unclear if they would still be filmed. Addressing these concerns, University of Washington News assistant director Jackson Holtz clarified that a single family's decision to opt out would actually exclude their entire classroom from the research. Ultimately, Holtz stated that this initial outreach was designed to gauge parent sentiment on AI, and based on the early negative feedback received, the university has entirely terminated the study and is notifying all participating sites. The university had taken down the section of its website describing the study, After 404 Media contacted them for comment.
Leak Source: 404 Media.