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Autori principali: Bodara, Heet, Mushfiq, Md Masum, Siddiqui, Isma Farah
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.19950
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author Bodara, Heet
Mushfiq, Md Masum
Siddiqui, Isma Farah
author_facet Bodara, Heet
Mushfiq, Md Masum
Siddiqui, Isma Farah
contents Large Language Models are increasingly used in conversational systems such as digital personal assistants, shaping how people interact with technology through language. While their responses often sound fluent and natural, they can also carry subtle tone biases such as sounding overly polite, cheerful, or cautious even when neutrality is expected. These tendencies can influence how users perceive trust, empathy, and fairness in dialogue. In this study, we explore tone bias as a hidden behavioral trait of large language models. The novelty of this research lies in the integration of controllable large language model based dialogue synthesis with tone classification models, enabling robust and ethical emotion recognition in personal assistant interactions. We created two synthetic dialogue datasets, one generated from neutral prompts and another explicitly guided to produce positive or negative tones. Surprisingly, even the neutral set showed consistent tonal skew, suggesting that bias may stem from the model's underlying conversational style. Using weak supervision through a pretrained DistilBERT model, we labeled tones and trained several classifiers to detect these patterns. Ensemble models achieved macro F1 scores up to 0.92, showing that tone bias is systematic, measurable, and relevant to designing fair and trustworthy conversational AI.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_19950
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Bias Beneath the Tone: Empirical Characterisation of Tone Bias in LLM-Driven UX Systems
Bodara, Heet
Mushfiq, Md Masum
Siddiqui, Isma Farah
Computation and Language
Human-Computer Interaction
Large Language Models are increasingly used in conversational systems such as digital personal assistants, shaping how people interact with technology through language. While their responses often sound fluent and natural, they can also carry subtle tone biases such as sounding overly polite, cheerful, or cautious even when neutrality is expected. These tendencies can influence how users perceive trust, empathy, and fairness in dialogue. In this study, we explore tone bias as a hidden behavioral trait of large language models. The novelty of this research lies in the integration of controllable large language model based dialogue synthesis with tone classification models, enabling robust and ethical emotion recognition in personal assistant interactions. We created two synthetic dialogue datasets, one generated from neutral prompts and another explicitly guided to produce positive or negative tones. Surprisingly, even the neutral set showed consistent tonal skew, suggesting that bias may stem from the model's underlying conversational style. Using weak supervision through a pretrained DistilBERT model, we labeled tones and trained several classifiers to detect these patterns. Ensemble models achieved macro F1 scores up to 0.92, showing that tone bias is systematic, measurable, and relevant to designing fair and trustworthy conversational AI.
title Bias Beneath the Tone: Empirical Characterisation of Tone Bias in LLM-Driven UX Systems
topic Computation and Language
Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.19950