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AI can change belief in conspiracy theories, study finds | Artificial intelligence (AI)


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AI can change belief in *********** theories, study finds | Artificial intelligence (AI)

Whether it is the mistaken idea that the moon landings never happened or the false claim that Covid jabs contain microchips, *********** theories abound,

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Now researchers have found that such beliefs can be altered by a chat with artificial intelligence (AI).

“Conventional wisdom will tell you that people who believe in *********** theories rarely, if ever, change their mind, especially according to evidence,” said Dr Thomas Costello, a co-author of the study from ********* University.

That, he added, is thought to be down to people adopting such beliefs to meet various needs – such as a ******* for control. However, the new study offers a different stance.

“Our findings fundamentally challenge the view that evidence and arguments are of little use once someone has ‘gone down the rabbit *****’ and come to believe a *********** theory,” the team wrote.

Crucially, the researchers said, the approach relies on an AI system that can draw on a vast array of information to produce conversations that encourage critical thinking and provide bespoke, fact-based counterarguments.

“The AI knew in advance what the person believed and, because of that, it was able to tailor its persuasion to their precise belief system,” said Costello.

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, Costello and colleagues reported how they carried out a series of experiments involving 2,190 participants with a belief in *********** theories.

While the experiments varied slightly, all participants were asked to describe a particular *********** theory they believed and the evidence they thought supported it. This was then fed into

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Participants were also asked to rate on a 100-point scale how true they thought the *********** theory was.

They then knowingly undertook a three-round back-and-forth conversation with the AI system about their *********** theory or a non-*********** topic. Afterwards, participants once more rated how true they thought their *********** theory was.

The results revealed those who discussed non-*********** topics only slightly lowered their “truth” rating afterwards. However, those who discussed their *********** theory with AI showed, on average, a 20% drop in their belief that it was true.

The team said the effects appeared to hold for at least two months, while the approach worked for almost all types of *********** theory – although not those that were true.

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The researchers added that the size of the effect depended on factors including how important the belief was to the participant and their trust in AI.

“About one in four people who began the experiment believing a *********** theory came out the other end without that belief,” said Costello.

“In most cases, the AI can only chip away – making people a bit more sceptical and uncertain – but a select few were disabused of their *********** entirely.”

The researchers added that reducing belief in one *********** theory appeared to reduce participants’ belief in other such ideas, at least to a small degree, while the approach could have applications in the real world – for example, AI could reply to posts relating to *********** theories on social media.

Prof Sander van der Linden of the University of Cambridge, who was not involved in the work, questioned whether people would engage with such AI voluntarily in the real world.

He also said it was unclear if similar results would be found if participants had chatted with an anonymous human, while there are also questions about how the AI was convincing *********** believers, given the system also uses strategies such as empathy and affirmation.

But, he added: “Overall, it’s a really novel and potentially important finding and a nice illustration of how AI can be leveraged to ****** misinformation.”



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#change #belief #*********** #theories #study #finds #Artificial #intelligence

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