CLMar 23

Greater accessibility can amplify discrimination in generative AI

arXiv:2603.2226045.3h-index: 28
AI Analysis

This research highlights a critical tension in AI development where efforts to expand accessibility through voice interfaces create new pathways for discrimination, demanding that fairness and accessibility be addressed together.

The study found that audio-enabled large language models exhibit systematic gender discrimination, shifting responses toward gender-stereotyped adjectives and occupations based on speaker voice, and amplifying bias beyond text-based interactions, with a survey of 1,000 participants showing infrequent users are most hesitant and likely to disengage when attribute inference is revealed.

Hundreds of millions of people rely on large language models (LLMs) for education, work, and even healthcare. Yet these models are known to reproduce and amplify social biases present in their training data. Moreover, text-based interfaces remain a barrier for many, for example, users with limited literacy, motor impairments, or mobile-only devices. Voice interaction promises to expand accessibility, but unlike text, speech carries identity cues that users cannot easily mask, raising concerns about whether accessibility gains may come at the cost of equitable treatment. Here we show that audio-enabled LLMs exhibit systematic gender discrimination, shifting responses toward gender-stereotyped adjectives and occupations solely on the basis of speaker voice, and amplifying bias beyond that observed in text-based interaction. Thus, voice interfaces do not merely extend text models to a new modality but introduce distinct bias mechanisms tied to paralinguistic cues. Complementary survey evidence ($n=1,000$) shows that infrequent chatbot users are most hesitant to undisclosed attribute inference and most likely to disengage when such practices are revealed. To demonstrate a potential mitigation strategy, we show that pitch manipulation can systematically regulate gender-discriminatory outputs. Overall, our findings reveal a critical tension in AI development: efforts to expand accessibility through voice interfaces simultaneously create new pathways for discrimination, demanding that fairness and accessibility be addressed in tandem.

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