Explainable Artificial Intelligence Models for Interpretable Decision-Making in High-Stakes Applications

Authors

  • Anshy Singh Department of Computer Engineering & Applications, GLA University, Mathura, rakesh.kumar@gla.ac.in, Department of Computer Engineering & Applications, GLA University, Mathura.
  • K Saroja Rani Associate Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, Pragati Engineering College, ADB Road, Surampalem, NearPeddapuram, Kakinada District, Andhra Pradesh, India - 533437.
  • Monisha J Assistant Professor, Department of Management Studies, Meenakshi College of Arts and Science, Meenakshi Academy of Higher Education and Research.
  • Yugandhar Manchala Assistant Professor, Department of Information Technology, Vardhaman College of Engineering, Shamshabad, Hyderabad, India - 501 218.
  • Dr. Sowjanya Bagadi Assistant Professor, School of Business, Aditya University, Surampalem, Andhra Pradesh, Pin 533437.
  • Suhas Bhise Assistant Professor, E&TC Engineering, Vishwakarma Institute of Technology, Pune, Maharashtra, 411037.
  • Durga Prasad School of Engineering &Technology,Noida international University, Uttar Pradesh 203201, India.

Keywords:

Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI), Interpretable Machine Learning, SHAP, LIME, Attention Mechanism, Counterfactual Reasoning, Decision-Making Systems, High-Stakes Applications, Trustworthy AI, Transparent Deep Learning, Human-Centered AI, Predictive Analytics

Abstract

Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) has been taken into higher stakes by the applications of high-stakes performances including healthcare diagnosis, financial fraud detection, cybersecurity analytics, legal decision support, and self-driven intelligent systems, where a transparent and trustworthy decision-making process is essential. Nevertheless, most traditional machine learning and deep learning systems are black-box systems, which can be extremely accurate in their predictions, but are not interpretable and are not based on human-irable arguments. This weakness lowers the user trust, responsibility, and reliability in real-world scenarios that are sensitive, and wrong or unaccount-explained decisions can cause dire outcomes. To overcome this challenge, this paper suggests a next generation Explainable Artificial Intelligence framework to interpret decisions made in high stakes applications. The proposed framework combines machine learning and deep learning architectures with several explainability mechanisms such as SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations), LIME (Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations), attention-based feature visualization, and counterfactual reasoning to produce both global and local model explanations. It has a hybrid decision interpretation module that enhances the analysis of feature attribution, consistency of explanations and semantic transparency of model predictions. The model was tested on benchmark high stakes datasets in real time intelligent decision making scenarios. Experimental findings indicate that the proposed method realized a 96.4 percent prediction accuracy and a 95.1 percent precision as well as a 94.7 and 94.9 percent recall, F1-score, and AUC-ROC, respectively, outperforming traditional black-box machine learning and deep learning models and significantly enhancing interpretability, transparency, and human-understandable reasoning with low computational loads that can be effectively applied in critical applications.

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Published

2026-05-12

How to Cite

Singh, A., Rani, K. S., J, M., Manchala, Y., Bagadi, D. S., Bhise, S., & Prasad, D. (2026). Explainable Artificial Intelligence Models for Interpretable Decision-Making in High-Stakes Applications. International Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, 6(2s), 683–693. Retrieved from https://svedbergopen.com/index.php/ijaiml/article/view/249

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