On The Stability of Moral Preferences: A Problem with Computational Elicitation Methods
Kyle Boerstler, Vijay Keswani, Lok Chan, Jana Schaich Borg, Vincent, Conitzer, Hoda Heidari, and Walter Sinnott-Armstrong

TL;DR
This study investigates the stability of moral preferences over time using repeated surveys, revealing significant response variability that impacts the reliability of moral preference elicitation in AI systems.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that moral preferences are unstable over time, challenging the assumption that single-survey methods accurately capture true moral values.
Findings
Participants changed responses 10-18% of the time on repeated moral questions.
Response instability correlates positively with response time and decision difficulty.
Implications for moral preference elicitation and stakeholder-AI value alignment are discussed.
Abstract
Preference elicitation frameworks feature heavily in the research on participatory ethical AI tools and provide a viable mechanism to enquire and incorporate the moral values of various stakeholders. As part of the elicitation process, surveys about moral preferences, opinions, and judgments are typically administered only once to each participant. This methodological practice is reasonable if participants' responses are stable over time such that, all other relevant factors being held constant, their responses today will be the same as their responses to the same questions at a later time. However, we do not know how often that is the case. It is possible that participants' true moral preferences change, are subject to temporary moods or whims, or are influenced by environmental factors we don't track. If participants' moral responses are unstable in such ways, it would raise important…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGame Theory and Voting Systems · Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies
