Three Years of r/ChatGPT: Societal Impact Evaluations from Social Media Data
For researchers and policymakers monitoring AI societal impacts, this provides a real-time framework using social media data, though the findings are largely observational and incremental.
This paper analyzes three years of r/ChatGPT posts to understand societal impacts of ChatGPT, finding that while overall usage normalizes, posts about mental health support and emotional attachments surged after GPT-4o's launch, detectable by their PuLSE method months before OpenAI acknowledged it.
ChatGPT was launched on November 30, 2022; the r/ChatGPT subreddit was created just one day later. Since then, chatbot-based AI products have gone from niche proofs-of-concept to widely-used household names. However, the ways in which adoption has developed among the public remains poorly understood. In this paper, we develop a framework for using social media as a data source for understanding the societal impact of widely-adopted consumer AI products, and propose PuLSE (Public and Longitudinal Signals for Evaluation), a general approach to monitoring for societally-impactful trends in real time. We apply our framework to conduct what is, to the best of our knowledge, the first longitudinal study of r/ChatGPT. We find that, overall, r/ChatGPT posts over time illustrate the normalization of ChatGPT as an everyday consumer product rather than an exceptional, novel technology. However, our retrospective analysis also finds that posts about using ChatGPT for mental health support, and posts about developing emotional attachments to ChatGPT, both rise steadily in frequency almost immediately after the launch of GPT-4o in May 2024. We show that PuLSE can detect the increase in emotional engagement as early as October 2024 -- months before OpenAI made any (public) acknowledgment of this impact. An interactive site to explore our results and methods, updated daily with live data, is available at rchatgpt-pulse.github.io.