Andrew N. Meltzoff

h-index109
2papers

2 Papers

86.2HCMay 19
Framing an AI with Values Reduces AI Reliance in AI-supported Writing Tasks

Alice Gao, Andrew N. Meltzoff, Maarten Sap et al.

Despite a global user base adopting large language models (LLMs) for daily writing tasks, model suggestions tend to align with Western values. Research has shown users commonly accept a high fraction of these AI suggestions, homogenizing writing styles and rendering outputs more ``Western'' than intended. While this suggests a need to reduce AI reliance, it remains unknown what kind of interventions could achieve this. Can framing the AI with specific values, and comparing it to one's own, make users less susceptible to overreliance and support more unique writing? We tested this hypothesis in a between-subjects online experiment with Indian and American participants (n=149) in which they were asked to perform AI-supported writing tasks, either 1) without an intervention, 2) after seeing an overview of the AI's framed values, or 3) after seeing an overview of the AI's framed values compared to their own. Our results show that seeing the AI's framed values reduces AI reliance, i.e., the proportion of the final essay generated by the AI, by an average of 20\%. Additionally, when participants saw an overview of the AI's framed values (without comparison to their own values), the final essays contain more unique text than without intervention. Our findings emphasize the importance of educating users about potential value biases in AI, showing that raising awareness with a simple overview of values encourages users to personalize their writing.

AIDec 29, 2023
Culturally-Attuned Moral Machines: Implicit Learning of Human Value Systems by AI through Inverse Reinforcement Learning

Nigini Oliveira, Jasmine Li, Koosha Khalvati et al.

Constructing a universal moral code for artificial intelligence (AI) is difficult or even impossible, given that different human cultures have different definitions of morality and different societal norms. We therefore argue that the value system of an AI should be culturally attuned: just as a child raised in a particular culture learns the specific values and norms of that culture, we propose that an AI agent operating in a particular human community should acquire that community's moral, ethical, and cultural codes. How AI systems might acquire such codes from human observation and interaction has remained an open question. Here, we propose using inverse reinforcement learning (IRL) as a method for AI agents to acquire a culturally-attuned value system implicitly. We test our approach using an experimental paradigm in which AI agents use IRL to learn different reward functions, which govern the agents' moral values, by observing the behavior of different cultural groups in an online virtual world requiring real-time decision making. We show that an AI agent learning from the average behavior of a particular cultural group can acquire altruistic characteristics reflective of that group's behavior, and this learned value system can generalize to new scenarios requiring altruistic judgments. Our results provide, to our knowledge, the first demonstration that AI agents could potentially be endowed with the ability to continually learn their values and norms from observing and interacting with humans, thereby becoming attuned to the culture they are operating in.