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A study conducted by a psychology professor at Georgia State University has found that people tend to view ethical answers generated by artificial intelligence (AI) as superior to those provided by humans. The study involved participants rating responses to ethical questions from both AI and human sources, without knowing their origin. The overwhelming majority of participants rated the AI-generated responses as more virtuous, intelligent, and trustworthy. These findings suggest that AI has the potential to pass a moral Turing test by exhibiting complex moral reasoning. However, the study also highlights the need for safeguards and ethical considerations as people increasingly rely on AI for moral and ethical guidance.
By Dr. Tony Hoang4.6
99 ratings
A study conducted by a psychology professor at Georgia State University has found that people tend to view ethical answers generated by artificial intelligence (AI) as superior to those provided by humans. The study involved participants rating responses to ethical questions from both AI and human sources, without knowing their origin. The overwhelming majority of participants rated the AI-generated responses as more virtuous, intelligent, and trustworthy. These findings suggest that AI has the potential to pass a moral Turing test by exhibiting complex moral reasoning. However, the study also highlights the need for safeguards and ethical considerations as people increasingly rely on AI for moral and ethical guidance.

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