91青青草

News

Chat AIs can role-play humans in surveys and pilot studies

Synthetic data from large language models can mimic human responses in interviews and questionnaires. Research data from popular crowdsourcing platforms may now contain fake responses that cannot be reliably detected, raising the risk of poisoned data
illustration of a green chat bubble against a yello background with yellow round objects in the middle portraying a "person is writing" prompt.
Image: Volodymyr Hryshchenko on Unsplash

Studying people in human-computer interaction (HCI) research can be slow. That鈥檚 why researchers at the Finnish Center for Artificial Intelligence (FCAI) recently harnessed the power of large language models (LLMs), specifically GPT-3, to generate open-ended answers to questions about video game player experience.

These AI-generated responses were often more convincing, as rated by humans, than real responses. These synthetic interviews offer a new approach to gathering data quickly and at low cost, which may help in fast iteration and initial testing of study designs and data analysis pipelines. Any findings based on AI-generated data, however, should also be confirmed with real data.

The researchers, based at Aalto University and the University of Helsinki, discovered some subtle differences in different versions of GPT-3 that affected the diversity of AI-generated responses. But a more discouraging implication is that data from popular crowdsourcing platforms may now automatically be suspect, as AI-generated responses are hard to distinguish from real ones. Amazon鈥檚 Mechanical Turk (MTurk), for example, can host surveys or research tasks for HCI, psychology, or related scientific areas and pay users for participation, but 'now that LLMs are so easy to access, any self-reported data from the internet cannot be trusted anymore. The economic incentives can drive malicious users to employ bots and LLMs to generate high-quality fake responses,' says Aalto University Associate Professor Perttu H盲m盲l盲inen.

The implications of synthetic data for anonymity, privacy and data protection in the medical field and similar domains are clear. However, in the realm of HCI, or science more widely, synthetic interviews and artificial experiments raise questions about the trustworthiness of crowdsourcing approaches that seeks to gather user data online. 'LLMs cannot and should not replace real participants, but synthetic data may be useful for initial exploration and piloting of research ideas,' suggests H盲m盲l盲inen. 'When real data is needed, it may be time to abandon crowdsourcing platforms like Mturk.'

鈥淓valuating Large Language Models in Generating Synthetic HCI Research Data: a Case Study鈥 was awarded Best Paper at CHI, the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in late April 2023. 

Reference: H盲m盲l盲inen, P., Tavast, M. and Kunnari, A. (2023). Evaluating Large Language Models in Generating Synthetic HCI Research Data: a Case Study. In Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. doi:
 

This article was originally published on

FCAI

The Finnish Center for Artificial Intelligence FCAI is a research hub initiated by Aalto University, the University of Helsinki, and the Technical Research Centre of Finland VTT. The goal of FCAI is to develop new types of artificial intelligence that can work with humans in complex environments, and help modernize Finnish industry. FCAI is one of the national flagships of the Academy of Finland.

A researcher in dark clothing presenting his work in front of a classroom, gesturing towards the whiteboard and talking.

Turbo-charging AI: Collaboration with NVIDIA renewed as joint tech center marks three years

NVIDIA AI Technology Center (NVAITC) Finland has accelerated research, training and computing power in over a dozen projects where high-performance computing meets AI

News
Christian Guckelsberger in front of graffiti

Ask a scientist: How will AI affect creativity?

The impact of creative AI is unfolding before our eyes, yet we struggle to understand it. It鈥檚 the perfect time to ask researchers what they see and think.

News
X-ray of hand with fingers making OK sign

AI is transforming healthcare: 5 things to know

Regulation, validation and trust are key when AI is used in medical services, say FCAI and Aalto University experts.

News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A person walks past a colourful mural on a brick wall, illuminated by street lamps and electric lines overhead.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

New Academy Research Fellows and Academy Projects

A total of 44 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellowship and Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland 鈥 congratulations to all!
Two flags at Aalto University: a pride flag and a yellow flag. A modern building and green trees are in the background.
Press releases Published:

LGBTQ-Friendly Firms More Innovative

Firms with progressive LGBTQ policies produce more patents, have more patent citations, and have higher innovation quality as measured by patent originality, generality, and internationality.
Five people with a diploma and flowers.
Awards and Recognition, Campus, Research & Art Published:

Spring term open science highlight: Aalto Open Science Award Ceremony

We gathered at A Grid to celebrate the awardees of the Aalto Open Science Award 2024 and discuss open science topics with the Aalto community.
Two interconnected circular loops; one blue labelled 'Simulation DBTL loop', one brown labelled 'Real-world DBTL loop'.
Awards and Recognition, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning 鈥 project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

Samuel Kaski receives ERC Advanced Grant to develop new machine learning that is robust, generalisable and engages human experts.