Writing With AI Help Can Shift Your Opinions
hubie writes:
Writing with AI help can shift your opinions:
Artificial intelligence-powered writing assistants that autocomplete sentences or offer "smart replies" not only put words into people's mouths, they also put ideas into their heads, according to new research.
Maurice Jakesch, a doctoral student in the field of information science asked more than 1,500 participants to write a paragraph answering the question, "Is social media good for society?" People who used an AI writing assistant that was biased for or against social media were twice as likely to write a paragraph agreeing with the assistant, and significantly more likely to say they held the same opinion, compared with people who wrote without AI's help.
The study suggests that the biases baked into AI writing tools - whether intentional or unintentional - could have concerning repercussions for culture and politics, researchers said.
"We're rushing to implement these AI models in all walks of life, but we need to better understand the implications," said co-author Mor Naaman, professor at the Jacobs Technion-Cornell Institute at Cornell Tech and of information science in the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science. "Apart from increasing efficiency and creativity, there could be other consequences for individuals and also for our society - shifts in language and opinions."
[...] These technologies deserve more public discussion regarding how they could be misused and how they should be monitored and regulated, the researchers said.
"The more powerful these technologies become and the more deeply we embed them in the social fabric of our societies," Jakesch said, "the more careful we might want to be about how we're governing the values, priorities and opinions built into them."
Journal Reference:
Maurice Jakesch, Advait Bhat, Daniel Buschek, et al., Co-Writing with Opinionated Language Models Affects Users' Views [open], CHI '23: Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, April 2023 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3544548.3581196
Read more of this story at SoylentNews.