Litcius/Paper detail

Drawing the full picture on diverging findings: adjusting the view on the perception of art created by artificial intelligence

Nicolas E. Neef, Sarah Zabel, Maria Papoli, Siegmar Otto

2024AI & Society19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract AI is becoming increasingly prevalent in creative fields that were thought to be exclusively human. Thus, it is non-surprising that a negative bias toward AI-generated artwork has been proclaimed. However, results are mixed. Studies that have presented AI-generated and human-created images simultaneously have detected a bias, but most studies in which participants saw either AI-generated or human-created images have not. Therefore, we propose that the bias arises foremost in a competitive situation between AI and humans. In a sample of N = 952 participants, we show that different evaluations emerge only when AI-generated and human-created pieces of art are presented simultaneously. Importantly, we demonstrate that AI art is not devalued, but rather, human art is upvalued, indicating the existence of a positive bias toward humans, rather than a negative bias. Further, we show that attitudes toward AI and empathy partially explain the different valuations of AI and human art in competitive situations.

Topics & Concepts

EmpathyPerceptionHuman intelligencePsychologyArtificial intelligencePerforming artsCognitive psychologyComputer scienceSocial psychologyArtVisual artsNeuroscienceAesthetic Perception and AnalysisPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentInnovation, Sustainability, Human-Machine Systems
Drawing the full picture on diverging findings: adjusting the view on the perception of art created by artificial intelligence | Litcius