Monday, May 11, 2026
Psychology Aisle
  • Home
  • Health
    • Brain Research
  • Mental Health
    • Alzheimers Disease
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Cognition
    • Depression
  • Relationships
  • More
    • Mindfulness
    • Neuroscience
  • Latest Print Magazines
    • Psychology Aisle Spring 2024
    • Psychology Aisle January 2024
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Mental & Lifestyle Health
No Result
View All Result
Home Brain Research

English Language Pushes Everyone, Even AI Chatbots, to Improve by Adding

Editorial Team by Editorial Team
April 3, 2023
in Brain Research
English Language Pushes Everyone, Even AI Chatbots, to Improve by Adding
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Summary: Researchers say the bias in the English language that leads us to improve communication by adding more detail is so common that it’s even ingrained into chatbots like ChatGPT.

Source: University of Birmingham

Language related to the concept of ‘improvement’ is more closely aligned with addition, rather than subtraction. This can lead us to make decisions which can overcomplicate things we are trying to make better.

The study is published today in Cognitive Science, by an international research team from the Universities of Birmingham, Glasgow, Potsdam, and Northumbria University.

Dr Bodo Winter, Associate Professor in Cognitive Linguistics at the University of Birmingham said: “Our study builds on existing research which has shown that when people seek to make improvements, they generally add things.

“We found that the same bias is deeply embedded in the English language. For example, the word ‘improve’ is closer in meaning to words like ‘add’ and ‘increase’ than to ‘subtract’ and ‘decrease’, so when somebody at a meeting says, ‘Does anybody have ideas for how we could improve this?,’ it will already, implicitly, contain a call for improving by adding rather than improving by subtracting.”

The research also finds that other verbs of change like ‘to change’, ‘to modify’, ‘to revise’ or ‘to enhance’ behave in a similar way, and if this linguistic addition bias is left unchecked, it can make things worse, rather than improve them. For example, improving by adding rather than subtracting can make bureaucracy become excessive.

This shows a cartoon of a chatbot conversation
The bias is so ingrained that even AI chatbots have it built in. Image is in the public domain

This bias works in reverse as well. Addition-related words are more frequent and more positive in ‘improvement’ contexts rather than subtraction-related words, meaning this addition bias is found at multiple levels of English language structure and use.

The bias is so ingrained that even AI chatbots have it built in. The researchers asked GPT-3, the predecessor of ChatGPT, what it thought of the word ‘add’. It replied: “The word ‘add’ is a positive word. Adding something to something else usually makes it better. For example, if you add sugar to your coffee, it will probably taste better. If you add a new friend to your life, you will probably be happier.”

Dr Winter concludes: “The positive addition bias in the English language is something we should all be aware of. It can influence our decisions and mean we are pre-disposed to add more layers, more levels, more things when in fact we might actually benefit from removing or simplifying.

“Maybe next time we are asked at work, or in life, to come up with suggestions on how to make improvements, we should take a second to consider our choices for a bit longer.”

About this AI and language research news

Author: Ellie Hail
Source: University of Birmingham
Contact: Ellie Hail – University of Birmingham
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: The findings will appear in Cognitive Science



Source link

Advertisement Banner
Previous Post

Study finds men will exaggerate when self-reporting masculinity-related traits, especially penis size

Next Post

John Fetterman reveals mental health spiral in tearful interview – USA TODAY

Next Post
MacArthur Award recipient to reveal how data unravels mysteries of … – Virginia Tech Daily

John Fetterman reveals mental health spiral in tearful interview - USA TODAY

Discussion about this post

Recommended

  • What I’m Doing to Feel My Best
  • The “Goldilocks” Choice: Why Older Adults are Turning to Cannabis
  • Reducing Visceral Fat Protects the Brain for Decades
  • Invisalign Cost in Australia: What You Need to Know
  • High Cognitive Scores Might Predict Depressive Relapse

© 2022 Psychology Aisle

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Health
    • Brain Research
  • Mental Health
    • Alzheimers Disease
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Cognition
    • Depression
  • Relationships
  • More
    • Mindfulness
    • Neuroscience
  • Latest Print Magazines
    • Psychology Aisle Spring 2024
    • Psychology Aisle January 2024
  • Contact

© 2022 Psychology Aisle

×

Please fill the required fields*