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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Touzel, Maximilian Puelma, Sarangi, Sneheel, Welch, Austin, Krishnakumar, Gayatri, Zhao, Dan, Yang, Zachary, Yu, Hao, Kosak-Hine, Ethan, Gibbs, Tom, Musulan, Andreea, Thibault, Camille, Gurbuz, Busra Tugce, Rabbany, Reihaneh, Godbout, Jean-François, Pelrine, Kellin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.13915
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Table of Contents:
  • The rise of AI-driven manipulation poses significant risks to societal trust and democratic processes. Yet, studying these effects in real-world settings at scale is ethically and logistically impractical, highlighting a need for simulation tools that can model these dynamics in controlled settings to enable experimentation with possible defenses. We present a simulation environment designed to address this. We elaborate upon the Concordia framework that simulates offline, `real life' activity by adding online interactions to the simulation through social media with the integration of a Mastodon server. We improve simulation efficiency and information flow, and add a set of measurement tools, particularly longitudinal surveys. We demonstrate the simulator with a tailored example in which we track agents' political positions and show how partisan manipulation of agents can affect election results.