Moral Behaviour Alters Impressions of Humans and Ais on Teams: Unethical Ais Are More Powerful While Ethical Humans Are Nicer
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) agents are increasingly being used as teammates, not just as tools, across many domains, and teammates' moral behaviour can alter impressions of themselves and the team. How good, powerful, and active is an AI versus human team member engaging in an ethical or unethical behaviour? How good, powerful, and active is their team? To address these questions, we conduct four studies across three domains (chess, esports, and poetry composition) where participants rate their impressions of team members and teams presented in a scenario. In the scenario, a member of a hybrid team of 2 humans and 2 AIs is presented with an opportunity to cheat, and either does or does not. We manipulate which team member (AI vs human) is acting and the morality of that action (non-cheating vs cheating). Across the studies, results show that ethical behaviour significantly increases the goodness of the human more than the AI, and unethical behaviour significantly increases the power of the AI more than the human. However, there were no systematic human versus AI differences on team impressions.
Recommended Citation
Shank, D. B., Dew, M., & Sajjad, F. (2024). Moral Behaviour Alters Impressions of Humans and Ais on Teams: Unethical Ais Are More Powerful While Ethical Humans Are Nicer. Behaviour and Information Technology Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1080/0144929X.2024.2403651
Department(s)
Psychological Science
Keywords and Phrases
artificial intelligence; cheating; hybrid team; Impressions; non-cheating
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
1362-3001; 0144-929X
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 Taylor and Francis Group; Taylor and Francis, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Jan 2024