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Autori principali: Dreksler, Noemi, Caviola, Lucius, Chalmers, David, Allen, Carter, Rand, Alex, Lewis, Joshua, Waggoner, Philip, Mays, Kate, Sebo, Jeff
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.11945
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author Dreksler, Noemi
Caviola, Lucius
Chalmers, David
Allen, Carter
Rand, Alex
Lewis, Joshua
Waggoner, Philip
Mays, Kate
Sebo, Jeff
author_facet Dreksler, Noemi
Caviola, Lucius
Chalmers, David
Allen, Carter
Rand, Alex
Lewis, Joshua
Waggoner, Philip
Mays, Kate
Sebo, Jeff
contents We surveyed 582 AI researchers who have published in leading AI venues and 838 nationally representative US participants about their views on the potential development of AI systems with subjective experience and how such systems should be treated and governed. When asked to estimate the chances that such systems will exist on specific dates, the median responses were 1% (AI researchers) and 5% (public) by 2024, 25% and 30% by 2034, and 70% and 60% by 2100, respectively. The median member of the public thought there was a higher chance that AI systems with subjective experience would never exist (25%) than the median AI researcher did (10%). Both groups perceived a need for multidisciplinary expertise to assess AI subjective experience. Although support for welfare protections for such AI systems exceeded opposition, it remained far lower than support for protections for animals or the environment. Attitudes toward moral and governance issues were divided in both groups, especially regarding whether such systems should be created and what rights or protections they should receive. Yet a majority of respondents in both groups agreed that safeguards against the potential risks from AI systems with subjective experience should be implemented by AI developers now, and if created, AI systems with subjective experience should treat others well, behave ethically, and be held accountable. Overall, these results suggest that both AI researchers and the public regard the emergence of AI systems with subjective experience as a possibility this century, though substantial uncertainty and disagreement remain about the timeline and appropriate response.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_11945
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Subjective Experience in AI Systems: What Do AI Researchers and the Public Believe?
Dreksler, Noemi
Caviola, Lucius
Chalmers, David
Allen, Carter
Rand, Alex
Lewis, Joshua
Waggoner, Philip
Mays, Kate
Sebo, Jeff
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
We surveyed 582 AI researchers who have published in leading AI venues and 838 nationally representative US participants about their views on the potential development of AI systems with subjective experience and how such systems should be treated and governed. When asked to estimate the chances that such systems will exist on specific dates, the median responses were 1% (AI researchers) and 5% (public) by 2024, 25% and 30% by 2034, and 70% and 60% by 2100, respectively. The median member of the public thought there was a higher chance that AI systems with subjective experience would never exist (25%) than the median AI researcher did (10%). Both groups perceived a need for multidisciplinary expertise to assess AI subjective experience. Although support for welfare protections for such AI systems exceeded opposition, it remained far lower than support for protections for animals or the environment. Attitudes toward moral and governance issues were divided in both groups, especially regarding whether such systems should be created and what rights or protections they should receive. Yet a majority of respondents in both groups agreed that safeguards against the potential risks from AI systems with subjective experience should be implemented by AI developers now, and if created, AI systems with subjective experience should treat others well, behave ethically, and be held accountable. Overall, these results suggest that both AI researchers and the public regard the emergence of AI systems with subjective experience as a possibility this century, though substantial uncertainty and disagreement remain about the timeline and appropriate response.
title Subjective Experience in AI Systems: What Do AI Researchers and the Public Believe?
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.11945