University of Virginia- Darden School of Business, Boston University, University of Regina Release Research: News From Artificial Intelligence is Believed Less
Retrieved on:
Wednesday, November 16, 2022
Lynx, Cyborg, University of Virginia, Boston University, AI, University, Conference, Bloomberg, Philip Bennett (Washington Post), University of Virginia Darden School of Business, Traction, Fairness, Accountability, University of Regina, Heliograph, News, Politics, Research, Artificial intelligence, Questrom School of Business, Crime, Association for Computing Machinery, The Washington Post, Algorithm, Medical device, Customer service
The research is described in a paper titled " News from Generative Artificial Intelligence Is Believed Less " and published by FAccT '22: 2022 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency.
Key Points:
- The research is described in a paper titled " News from Generative Artificial Intelligence Is Believed Less " and published by FAccT '22: 2022 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency.
- One of the most promising applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the ability to produce textual, visual, and auditory content with little to no human intervention.
- Now, AI is capable of producing contenta fictional story, a poem, or even a programming codevirtually indistinguishable from text written by a person.
- Chiara Longoni (Boston University, Questrom School of Business), Andrey Fradkin (Boston University, Questrom School of Business), Luca Cian (University of Virginia, Darden School of Business), and Gordon Pennycook (University of Regina, Hill/Levene Schools of Business) explored this question.