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Large language models can outperform humans in social situational judgments

Justin Mittelstädt, Julia Maier, Panja Goerke, Frank Zinn, Michael Hermes

2024Scientific Reports37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Large language models (LLM) have been a catalyst for the public interest in artificial intelligence (AI). These technologies perform some knowledge-based tasks better and faster than human beings. However, whether AIs can correctly assess social situations and devise socially appropriate behavior, is still unclear. We conducted an established Situational Judgment Test (SJT) with five different chatbots and compared their results with responses of human participants (N = 276). Claude, Copilot and you.com's smart assistant performed significantly better than humans in proposing suitable behaviors in social situations. Moreover, their effectiveness rating of different behavior options aligned well with expert ratings. These results indicate that LLMs are capable of producing adept social judgments. While this constitutes an important requirement for the use as virtual social assistants, challenges and risks are still associated with their wide-spread use in social contexts.

Topics & Concepts

Situational ethicsComputer scienceData scienceArtificial intelligenceNatural language processingPsychologySocial psychologyArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsMedical Education and Admissions
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