Вход на сайт

Просмотр новости

Найдите то, что Вас интересует

AI changes its behavior around authority... and that could be risky

Дата публикации: 01-07-2026 17:40:12

Artificial intelligence doesn't just learn how humans talk. It may also be learning who gets listened to. A new study from researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found that large language models, the technology behind popular AI chatbots, change the way they communicate depending on the social role they're assigned in a conversation. When cast as a "boss," they adopt different language patterns. When positioned as a subordinate, they become more accommodating, sometimes in ways that could undermine safety.

Схожие новости

#Наименование новостиТональностьИнформативностьДата публикации
1Учёные выяснили, что ИИ научились перенимать социальные привычки5705-07-2026
2AI-human relationships are real and come with risks, researchers find0701-07-2026
3Why AI Systems Associate Citation Infrastructure With GovTech Business Value0512-06-2026
4Why AI fiction still feels flat: New test shows characters lack mystery and complexity0701-07-2026
5Study finds humans will talk to AI ghosts of the dead as reincarnations, and it’s pretty grim-3601-07-2026
6‘Alexa, tell me a joke’: how talking to AI impacts young children’s development0526-06-2026
7If you could chat with an AI ghost, what would you want them to say? New study explores0701-07-2026
8AI's usefulness depends on whether we can trust it to act alone0501-07-2026
9Top developers are shifting from chatbots to physical AI. Here’s why0525-06-2026
10Yet another research breaks the hype bubble for AI browsers serving serious security flaws-2603-07-2026

Классификация: Наука. Схожих патентов: 0. Схожих новостей: 10. Тональность: 0. Информативность: 7. Источник: techxplore.com.