Relational Norms for Human-AI Cooperation
Brian D. Earp, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Mateo Aboy, Edmond Awad, Monika, Betzler, Marietjie Botes, Rachel Calcott, Mina Caraccio, Nick Chater, Mark, Coeckelbergh, Mihaela Constantinescu, Hossein Dabbagh, Kate Devlin, Xiaojun, Ding, Vilius Dranseika, Jim A. C. Everett, Ruiping Fan

TL;DR
This paper examines how human social norms can inform the design of AI systems occupying social roles, emphasizing ethical considerations and the impact on human well-being.
Contribution
It analyzes the influence of human relational norms on AI design and interaction, highlighting the importance of implementing appropriate norms for ethical human-AI cooperation.
Findings
AI systems can effectively serve social roles with proper norm adherence
Misaligned norms may lead to unhealthy dependencies or unrealistic expectations
Understanding norms is crucial for ethical and trustworthy AI design
Abstract
How we should design and interact with social artificial intelligence depends on the socio-relational role the AI is meant to emulate or occupy. In human society, relationships such as teacher-student, parent-child, neighbors, siblings, or employer-employee are governed by specific norms that prescribe or proscribe cooperative functions including hierarchy, care, transaction, and mating. These norms shape our judgments of what is appropriate for each partner. For example, workplace norms may allow a boss to give orders to an employee, but not vice versa, reflecting hierarchical and transactional expectations. As AI agents and chatbots powered by large language models are increasingly designed to serve roles analogous to human positions - such as assistant, mental health provider, tutor, or romantic partner - it is imperative to examine whether and how human relational norms should…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Collaboration in agile enterprises · Cognitive Science and Mapping
