When psychologist Raluca Rilla asked volunteers to complete a survey last year, she got the following response to one of her questions: “I don’t experience confusion in the same way humans do.”
Rilla, a PhD student at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, suspects that this is the obvious tip of a large and worrying iceberg — one that could scupper academic research on how people think and behave. She and her colleagues estimate that up to 45% of responses they receive to such surveys are now copied and pasted from the output of large language models (LLMs)1. In some cases, participants might simply be polishing their language. In others, Rilla thinks that the entire operation — signing up, reading the questions and submitting responses — is handled by a machine. Such answers, and the academic studies built on them, are unlikely to reflect the reality of human nature.
Experimental psychology is not alone in wrestling with the impact of LLMs on research. From political science and economics to opinion polling, researchers across the social sciences are sounding the alarm after finding the fingerprints of artificial intelligence and considering the implications.
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