Authors
Kevin Allan, Nir Oren, Jacqui Hutchison, Douglas Martin
Publication date
2021/7/1
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
11
Issue
1
Pages
13687
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
If artificial intelligence (AI) is to help solve individual, societal and global problems, humans should neither underestimate nor overestimate its trustworthiness. Situated in-between these two extremes is an ideal ‘Goldilocks’ zone of credibility. But what will keep trust in this zone? We hypothesise that this role ultimately falls to the social cognition mechanisms which adaptively regulate conformity between humans. This novel hypothesis predicts that human-like functional biases in conformity should occur during interactions with AI. We examined multiple tests of this prediction using a collaborative remembering paradigm, where participants viewed household scenes for 30 s vs. 2 min, then saw 2-alternative forced-choice decisions about scene content originating either from AI- or human-sources. We manipulated the credibility of different sources (Experiment 1) and, from a single source, the estimated-likelihood …
Total citations
Scholar articles
K Allan, N Oren, J Hutchison, D Martin - Scientific Reports, 2021