Blissful (A)Ignorance: People form overly positive impressions of others based on their written messages, despite wide-scale adoption of Generative AI
Jiaqi Zhu, Andras Molnar

TL;DR
This study reveals that people tend to form overly positive impressions of others based on written messages, especially when unaware of AI involvement, highlighting a gap between explicit disclosures and real-world perceptions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that recipients often overlook AI use in messages unless explicitly disclosed, revealing a gap in social perception influenced by GenAI.
Findings
Disclosing AI use negatively impacts impressions.
Uninformed recipients do not skepticism towards AI-generated messages.
Many users admit to using GenAI recently.
Abstract
As the use of Generative AI (GenAI) tools becomes more prevalent in interpersonal communication, understanding their impact on social perceptions is crucial. According to signaling theory, GenAI may undermine the credibility of social signals conveyed in writing, since it reduces the cost of writing and makes it hard to verify the authenticity of messages. Using a pre-registered large-scale online experiment (N = 647; Prolific), featuring scenarios in a range of communication contexts (personal vs. professional; close others vs. strangers), we explored how senders' use of GenAI influenced recipients' impressions of senders, both when GenAI use was known or uncertain. Consistent with past work, we found strong negative effects on social impressions when disclosing that a message was AI-generated, compared to when the same message was human-written. However, under the more realistic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMisinformation and Its Impacts
