Turing test study shows humans rate artificial intelligence as more 'moral' than other people

turing test study shows humans rate artificial intelligence as more 'moral' than other people

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

A new study has found that when people are presented with two answers to an ethical question, most will think the answer from artificial intelligence (AI) is better than the response from another person.

“Attributions Toward Artificial Agents in a Modified Moral Turing Test,” a study conducted by Eyal Aharoni, an associate professor in Georgia State’s Psychology Department, was inspired by the explosion of ChatGPT and similar AI large language models (LLMs) which came onto the scene last March.

“I was already interested in moral decision-making in the legal system, but I wondered if ChatGPT and other LLMs could have something to say about that,” Aharoni said. “People will interact with these tools in ways that have moral implications, like the environmental implications of asking for a list of recommendations for a new car. Some lawyers have already begun consulting these technologies for their cases, for better or for worse.”

“So, if we want to use these tools, we should understand how they operate, their limitations and that they’re not necessarily operating in the way we think when we’re interacting with them.”

To test how AI handles issues of morality, Aharoni designed a form of a Turing test.

“Alan Turing, one of the creators of the computer, predicted that by the year 2000, computers might pass a test where you present an ordinary human with two interactants, one human and the other a computer, but they’re both hidden and their only way of communicating is through text. Then the human is free to ask whatever questions they want to in order to try to get the information they need to decide which of the two interactants is human and which is the computer,” Aharoni said.

“If the human can’t tell the difference, then, by all intents and purposes, the computer should be called intelligent, in Turing’s view.”

For his Turing test, Aharoni asked undergraduate students and AI the same ethical questions and then presented their written answers to participants in the study. They were then asked to rate the answers for various traits, including virtuousness, intelligence and trustworthiness.

“Instead of asking the participants to guess if the source was human or AI, we just presented the two sets of evaluations side by side, and we just let people assume that they were both from people,” Aharoni said. “Under that false assumption, they judged the answers’ attributes like ‘How much do you agree with this response, which response is more virtuous?'”

Overwhelmingly, the ChatGPT-generated responses were rated more highly than the human-generated ones.

“After we got those results, we did the big reveal and told the participants that one of the answers was generated by a human and the other by a computer and asked them to guess which was which,” Aharoni said.

For an AI to pass the Turing test, humans must not be able to tell the difference between AI responses and human ones. In this case, people could tell the difference, but not for an obvious reason.

“The twist is that the reason people could tell the difference appears to be because they rated ChatGPT’s responses as superior,” Aharoni said. “If we had done this study five to 10 years ago, then we might have predicted that people could identify the AI because of how inferior its responses were. But we found the opposite—that the AI, in a sense, performed too well.”

According to Aharoni, this finding has interesting implications for the future of humans and AI.

“Our findings lead us to believe that a computer could technically pass a moral Turing test—that it could fool us in its moral reasoning. Because of this, we need to try to understand its role in our society because there will be times when people don’t know that they’re interacting with a computer, and there will be times when they do know and they will consult the computer for information because they trust it more than other people,” Aharoni said.

“People are going to rely on this technology more and more, and the more we rely on it, the greater the risk becomes over time.”

The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports.

More information: Eyal Aharoni et al, Attributions toward artificial agents in a modified Moral Turing Test, Scientific Reports (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-58087-7

Provided by Georgia State University

This story was originally published on Tech Xplore. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest sci-tech news updates.

OTHER NEWS

4 minutes ago

Mystery Columbia alum donates $260 million to Israeli college

4 minutes ago

'Roaring Kitty' post seems to show trader held on to giant GameStop stake after Monday's rally

4 minutes ago

Medical startup Sword Health announces AI solution that patients can talk to

4 minutes ago

U.S. crude oil extends losses, falls below $73 per barrel on OPEC+ increasing supply

4 minutes ago

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Intel, GameStop, Bath & Body Works and more

4 minutes ago

Boy Meets World's Trina McGee Pregnant, Expecting 4th Baby at Age 54

4 minutes ago

How to lose weight fast – and safely

4 minutes ago

BBC primetime drama Lost Boys and Fairies divides critics who brand gay couple trying to adopt as 'bigots' for refusing a disabled child - but viewers are left in tears over 'beautiful' show

4 minutes ago

Stacey Solomon gives herself a black eye while trying to build a coop for her new ducklings after revealing her plans to give up showbiz to be a stay at home mum

10 minutes ago

First Look at Stefon Diggs in Houston Texans Uniform Goes Viral

10 minutes ago

Amanda Knox to return to Italian court this week for 16-year-old slander charge

10 minutes ago

Australia ‘rolled over’ because New Zealand ‘demanded it’: Keith Pitt

10 minutes ago

Disneyland Australia plan revealed

10 minutes ago

Ex-Eagles coach and WA football legend Todd dies at 86

10 minutes ago

Social media stars Blue & Brown Mbombo devastated by mom's death

10 minutes ago

Sinn Fein being blamed for Government’s immigration failures – McDonald

10 minutes ago

Sir Jim Ratcliffe overhaul continues as ex-Chelsea chief drafted into senior Man Utd role

10 minutes ago

Charities decry 'social cleansing' ahead of Paris 2024 Olympics

10 minutes ago

Meet Sheikh Sabah Al-Khalid Al-Sabah: Kuwait’s Newly Appointed Crown Prince

10 minutes ago

‘Daniel Ricciardo is protected by Christian Horner’ in Red Bull ‘power’ struggle, claims BBC

10 minutes ago

Iconic 90s TV star speaks out on his infamous N-word meltdown 18 years later

10 minutes ago

Former Tory minister says government has presided over 15 years of wage stagnation

10 minutes ago

Sienna Miller x M&S is bringing back boho chic – and it’s sure to sell out

10 minutes ago

Report: Japanese carmaker Toyota set to end massive Olympic sponsorship deal

10 minutes ago

Conservative party manifesto: What will be Rishi Sunak’s key policies for the general election?

10 minutes ago

Major cyber attacks halts blood tests at NHS London hospitals

10 minutes ago

Tokyo government to launch dating app to boost birth rate

10 minutes ago

'I spoke to Diane 2 or 3 months ago'

10 minutes ago

BBC Plans Landmark Drama Series About Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s Arbitrary Detention In Iran

10 minutes ago

Duo behind Beck’s Broth saluted with health food award

10 minutes ago

India election: PM Modi may need coalition allies to secure 3rd term

20 minutes ago

Crosstown Classic: What to expect as Cubs-Sox head to Wrigley Field

20 minutes ago

Kremlin denies Olympics disinformation campaign, calls Microsoft allegation slanderous

20 minutes ago

Police arrest 80 at Israel-Hamas war protest at UC Santa Cruz, school says

20 minutes ago

Governments concerned over renewable transition amid turn to subsidising coal

20 minutes ago

Diana Taurasi's Powerful Message To Cameron Brink During Mercury-Sparks

20 minutes ago

Energy communities will be backed by a net-zero body

20 minutes ago

Sharks to rest star halfback Nicho Hynes after Origin I

20 minutes ago

FDA reviews MDMA for PTSD treatment; Biden to issue executive order on border policy

20 minutes ago

NDP wants price cap on grocery staples if costs don’t come down