Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm going to follow my colleague, Ms. Hepfner, on some of the questioning.
Mr. Jenkins, again, you've written about the other-race effect, which is a theory that own-race faces are better remembered than other-race faces. We know that facial recognition technology is very accurate with white faces, but its accuracy drops with other skin colours.
Could this be due to the other-race effect of the programmers, essentially a predominantly white programming team creating an AI that is better at recognizing white faces? Would the same bias apply to an FRT AI developed by a predominantly, let's say, Black programming team? What does your research show, and what are you seeing in your studies?