AICLHCFeb 7, 2024

Can Large Language Model Agents Simulate Human Trust Behavior?

arXiv:2402.04559v474 citationsh-index: 21NIPS
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of simulating human trust for social science and role-playing applications, but it is incremental as it focuses on a specific behavior within existing frameworks.

The paper investigated whether large language model (LLM) agents can simulate human trust behavior, finding that GPT-4 agents exhibit high behavioral alignment with humans in trust games, indicating feasibility for such simulations.

Large Language Model (LLM) agents have been increasingly adopted as simulation tools to model humans in social science and role-playing applications. However, one fundamental question remains: can LLM agents really simulate human behavior? In this paper, we focus on one critical and elemental behavior in human interactions, trust, and investigate whether LLM agents can simulate human trust behavior. We first find that LLM agents generally exhibit trust behavior, referred to as agent trust, under the framework of Trust Games, which are widely recognized in behavioral economics. Then, we discover that GPT-4 agents manifest high behavioral alignment with humans in terms of trust behavior, indicating the feasibility of simulating human trust behavior with LLM agents. In addition, we probe the biases of agent trust and differences in agent trust towards other LLM agents and humans. We also explore the intrinsic properties of agent trust under conditions including external manipulations and advanced reasoning strategies. Our study provides new insights into the behaviors of LLM agents and the fundamental analogy between LLMs and humans beyond value alignment. We further illustrate broader implications of our discoveries for applications where trust is paramount.

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