Mitigating Societal Cognitive Overload in the Age of AI: Challenges and Directions
This addresses the challenge of cognitive overload for society in the AI age, but it is incremental as it reframes existing debates without proposing new methods or solutions.
The paper tackles the problem of societal cognitive overload exacerbated by AI, arguing it is critical for human well-being and a prerequisite for managing AI risks, and concludes by discussing potential institutional and policy adaptations for an overload-resilient perspective on human-AI alignment.
Societal cognitive overload, driven by the deluge of information and complexity in the AI age, poses a critical challenge to human well-being and societal resilience. This paper argues that mitigating cognitive overload is not only essential for improving present-day life but also a crucial prerequisite for navigating the potential risks of advanced AI, including existential threats. We examine how AI exacerbates cognitive overload through various mechanisms, including information proliferation, algorithmic manipulation, automation anxieties, deregulation, and the erosion of meaning. The paper reframes the AI safety debate to center on cognitive overload, highlighting its role as a bridge between near-term harms and long-term risks. It concludes by discussing potential institutional adaptations, research directions, and policy considerations that arise from adopting an overload-resilient perspective on human-AI alignment, suggesting pathways for future exploration rather than prescribing definitive solutions.