Durably reducing conspiracy beliefs through dialogues with AI
American University · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +1 more institution
Abstract
Conspiracy theory beliefs are notoriously persistent. Influential hypotheses propose that they fulfill important psychological needs, thus resisting counterevidence. Yet previous failures in correcting conspiracy beliefs may be due to counterevidence being insufficiently compelling and tailored. To evaluate this possibility, we leveraged developments in generative artificial intelligence and engaged 2190 conspiracy believers in personalized evidence-based dialogues with GPT-4 Turbo. The intervention reduced conspiracy belief by ~20%. The effect remained 2 months later, generalized across a wide range of conspiracy theories, and occurred even among participants with deeply entrenched beliefs. Although the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 251.04
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 78
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Generative grammar
- Intervention (counseling)
- Social psychology
- Epistemology
- Computer science
- Philosophy
- Artificial intelligence
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions