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Autori principali: Teng, Yue, Zhong, Qianer, Thordsen, Kim Mai Tich Nguyen, Montag, Christian, Becker, Benjamin
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21430
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author Teng, Yue
Zhong, Qianer
Thordsen, Kim Mai Tich Nguyen
Montag, Christian
Becker, Benjamin
author_facet Teng, Yue
Zhong, Qianer
Thordsen, Kim Mai Tich Nguyen
Montag, Christian
Becker, Benjamin
contents Moral judgements form the foundation of human social behavior and societal systems. While Artificial Intelligence chatbots increasingly serve as personal advisors, their influence on moral judgments remains largely unexplored. Here, we examined whether directive AI conversations shift moral evaluations using a within-subject naturalistic paradigm. Fifty-three participants rated moral scenarios, then discussed four with a chatbot prompted to shift moral judgments and four with a control agent. The brief conversations induced significant directional shifts in moral judgments, accepting stricter standards as well as advocating greater leniency (ps < 0.05; Cohen's d = 0.735-1.576), with increasing strengths of this effect during a two-week follow-up (Cohen's d = 1.038-2.069). Critically, the control condition produced no changes, and the effects did not extend to punishment while participants remained unaware of the persuasive intent, and both agents were rated equally likable and convincing, suggesting a vulnerability to undetected and lasting manipulation of foundational moral values.
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Brief chatbot interactions produce lasting changes in human moral values
Teng, Yue
Zhong, Qianer
Thordsen, Kim Mai Tich Nguyen
Montag, Christian
Becker, Benjamin
Artificial Intelligence
Moral judgements form the foundation of human social behavior and societal systems. While Artificial Intelligence chatbots increasingly serve as personal advisors, their influence on moral judgments remains largely unexplored. Here, we examined whether directive AI conversations shift moral evaluations using a within-subject naturalistic paradigm. Fifty-three participants rated moral scenarios, then discussed four with a chatbot prompted to shift moral judgments and four with a control agent. The brief conversations induced significant directional shifts in moral judgments, accepting stricter standards as well as advocating greater leniency (ps < 0.05; Cohen's d = 0.735-1.576), with increasing strengths of this effect during a two-week follow-up (Cohen's d = 1.038-2.069). Critically, the control condition produced no changes, and the effects did not extend to punishment while participants remained unaware of the persuasive intent, and both agents were rated equally likable and convincing, suggesting a vulnerability to undetected and lasting manipulation of foundational moral values.
title Brief chatbot interactions produce lasting changes in human moral values
topic Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.21430