Trust toward humans and trust toward artificial intelligence are not associated: Initial insights from self-report and neurostructural brain imaging.

Q3 Medicine
Personality Neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-03-21 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1017/pen.2022.5
Christian Montag, Benjamin Klugah-Brown, Xinqi Zhou, Jennifer Wernicke, Congcong Liu, Juan Kou, Yuanshu Chen, Brian W Haas, Benjamin Becker
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The present study examines whether self-reported trust in humans and self-reported trust in [(different) products with built-in] artificial intelligence (AI) are associated with one another and with brain structure. We sampled 90 healthy participants who provided self-reported trust in humans and AI and underwent brain structural magnetic resonance imaging assessment. We found that trust in humans, as measured by the trust facet of the personality inventory NEO-PI-R, and trust in AI products, as measured by items assessing attitudes toward AI and by a composite score based on items assessing trust toward products with in-built AI, were not significantly correlated. We also used a concomitant dimensional neuroimaging approach employing a data-driven source-based morphometry (SBM) analysis of gray-matter-density to investigate neurostructural associations with each trust domain. We found that trust in humans was negatively (and significantly) correlated with an SBM component encompassing striato-thalamic and prefrontal regions. We did not observe significant brain structural association with trust in AI. The present findings provide evidence that trust in humans and trust in AI seem to be dissociable constructs. While the personal disposition to trust in humans might be "hardwired" to the brain's neurostructural architecture (at least from an individual differences perspective), a corresponding significant link for the disposition to trust AI was not observed. These findings represent an initial step toward elucidating how different forms of trust might be processed on the behavioral and brain level.

对人类的信任和对人工智能的信任没有关联:来自自我报告和神经结构脑成像的初步见解
摘要本研究考察了对人类的自我报告信任和对[(不同)内置]人工智能产品的自我报告的信任是否相互关联,并与大脑结构有关。我们对90名健康参与者进行了抽样,他们自我报告对人类和人工智能的信任,并接受了大脑结构磁共振成像评估。我们发现,通过人格清单NEO-PI-R的信任方面来衡量对人类的信任,通过评估对人工智能的态度的项目来衡量对人工智能产品的信任,以及通过基于评估对内置人工智能产品信任的项目的综合得分来衡量,两者之间没有显著相关性。我们还使用了一种伴随维度神经成像方法,采用数据驱动的基于源的灰质密度形态计量学(SBM)分析来研究与每个信任域的神经结构关联。我们发现,对人类的信任与包括纹状体-丘脑和前额叶区域的SBM成分呈负相关(且显著)。我们没有观察到大脑结构与对人工智能的信任有显著的关联。目前的研究结果提供了证据,证明对人类的信任和对人工智能信任似乎是不可分离的结构。虽然个人信任人类的倾向可能与大脑的神经结构结构“固有”(至少从个体差异的角度来看),但没有观察到信任人工智能的倾向之间存在相应的重要联系。这些发现代表着阐明如何在行为和大脑层面处理不同形式的信任迈出了第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Personality Neuroscience
Personality Neuroscience Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
6 weeks
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