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Does distrust in humans predict greater trust in AI? Role of individual differences in user responses to content moderation

María D. Molina, S. Shyam Sundar

2022New Media & Society108 citationsDOI

Abstract

When evaluating automated systems, some users apply the “positive machine heuristic” (i.e. machines are more accurate and precise than humans), whereas others apply the “negative machine heuristic” (i.e. machines lack the ability to make nuanced subjective judgments), but we do not know much about the characteristics that predict whether a user would apply the positive or negative machine heuristic. We conducted a study in the context of content moderation and discovered that individual differences relating to trust in humans, fear of artificial intelligence (AI), power usage, and political ideology can predict whether a user will invoke the positive or negative machine heuristic. For example, users who distrust other humans tend to be more positive toward machines. Our findings advance theoretical understanding of user responses to AI systems for content moderation and hold practical implications for the design of interfaces to appeal to users who are differentially predisposed toward trusting machines over humans.

Topics & Concepts

DistrustModerationHeuristicComputer scienceContext (archaeology)Social psychologyPsychologyCognitive psychologyArtificial intelligencePsychotherapistBiologyPaleontologyHate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionEthics and Social Impacts of AIPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
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