PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

English language pushes everyone – even AI chatbots - to improve by adding

STRICTLY EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.001am MONDAY 3rd APRIL BST/ 19.01pm SUNDAY 2nd APRIL ET

2023-04-03
(Press-News.org)

A linguistic bias in the English language that leads us to ‘improve’ things by adding to them, rather than taking away, is so common that it is even ingrained in AI chatbots, a new study reveals.

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 (Monday 3rd April) 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 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.”

ENDS

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Privately sponsored refugees likely to receive better prenatal care than government-assisted refugees in Canada

2023-04-03
Government-assisted refugees were less likely to receive adequate prenatal care than privately sponsored refugees, found a new study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.221207. Canada has 2 main pathways to resettle refugees: government assistance and private sponsorship by family members or non-family volunteers. To determine whether refugees receive adequate prenatal care (defined as initiation of prenatal care by 13 weeks' gestation; receipt of a minimum number of prenatal care visits, as recommended by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada; and receipt of a prenatal fetal anatomy ultrasound ...

Taylor & Francis to pilot first transparent peer review model for a higher education research journal

2023-04-03
The quality and integrity of peer review in Higher Education research has been put firmly in the spotlight by the European Journal of Higher Education (EJHE), published by Taylor & Francis. All articles submitted from April 2023 will, if accepted, have their reviewer reports published at the same time, as part of a one-year pilot. The EJHE peer review process itself will remain the same, with reports on manuscripts under consideration received from two or three referees before an editorial decision is made. ...

Virginia Tech researcher identifies narrow opportunity to address a rare disease linked to autism, schizophrenia

Virginia Tech researcher identifies narrow opportunity to address a rare disease linked to autism, schizophrenia
2023-04-03
The human brain begins to assemble itself shortly after conception as a growing number of brain cells connect to create circuits across the brain. Genes provide the blueprint for construction, but occasionally the blueprint is incomplete, connections aren’t made, and circuits fail — sometimes long before the problem can be recognized, let alone fixed. That’s the case with DiGeorge syndrome, also called 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, a genetic disorder affecting about one in 3,000 babies. It begins with a deletion of one of two copies of a small number of genes on human chromosome 22, whose cascading effects include cardiovascular problems, craniofacial ...

Polyamorous relationships can have as many benefits as monogamous ones, shows research

2023-04-03
Polyamorists face stigma and discrimination in their day-to-day lives, yet research shows that having a romantic relationship with more than one person at a time may offer emotional and physical benefits to all parties. Monogamy is frequently portrayed as the ideal form of romantic love in many modern societies. From the stories we read as children, to the films and books we consume as adults – we are told that to achieve happiness we need to find our one true soulmate to share the rest of our lives with. At the same time, states and governments offer financial, legal, and social incentives to married couples. Meanwhile men and women who deviate from these monogamous ...

Aston University establishes new independent investment company

2023-04-02
Aston University is one of eight research intensive universities in the Midlands to establish a new investment company to accelerate the commercialisation of university spinouts and early-stage IP rich businesses in the region.  Midlands Mindforge Limited has been co-founded by Aston University, University of Birmingham, Cranfield University, Keele University, University of Leicester, Loughborough University, University of Nottingham and University of Warwick, collectively Midlands Innovation. This ambitious, patient capital ...

Outbreak of typhoid on Dutch ship traced to contaminated drinking water

2023-04-02
**Note: the release below is a special early release from the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases (ECCMID 2023, Copenhagen, 15-18 April). Please credit the conference if you use this story**   Embargo: 2301H UK time Saturday 1 April A large outbreak of typhoid on a ship in the Netherlands has been traced to contaminated water, this year's European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases (ECCMID 2023, Copenhagen, 15-18 April) will hear. Seventy-two cases of typhoid were confirmed in the spring 2022 outbreak on the Liberty Ann, an old cruise ship which was being ...

Extremely rare gene variants point to a potential cause of age-related macular degeneration

Extremely rare gene variants point to a potential cause of age-related macular degeneration
2023-04-01
A study from the National Eye Institute (NEI) identified rare genetic variants that could point to one of the general mechanisms driving age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a common cause of vision loss in older adults. The variants generate malformed proteins that alter the stability of the membrane attack complex (MAC), which may drive a chronic inflammatory response in the retina. The findings, published in the journal iScience, point to MAC as a potential therapeutic target to slow or prevent the development of AMD. NEI is part of the National Institutes of Health. There are many known genetic variants that raise or lower ...

After spinal cord injury, kinesthetic sense helps restore movement, model suggests

After spinal cord injury, kinesthetic sense helps restore movement, model suggests
2023-04-01
For nearly 50 years, a jawless fish called the lamprey has interested scientists because of its remarkable ability to recover from spinal cord injuries. A new study reveals a possible technique lampreys may use to swim again, despite sparse neural regeneration. Christina Hamlet of Bucknell University and collaborators, including Jennifer R. Morgan of the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), used a mathematical model to demonstrate how lampreys may use body-sensing feedback to regain swimming abilities after spinal injury. The ...

Cookin' with gas: UWO professor earns patent for flameless industrial oven

Cookin with gas: UWO professor earns patent for flameless industrial oven
2023-04-01
Pawel Olszewski, a University of Wisconsin Oshkosh associate mechanical engineering technology professor, recently was granted a U.S. patent for his flameless impingement oven, designed and built in the Teaching and Energy Research Industrial Lab (TERIL) on the Oshkosh campus. Olszewski began the patent process back in 2019 with WiSys, the Wisconsin-based nonprofit dedicated to helping inventors protect their intellectual property, and received the news of approval in February. Titled “flameless impingement oven,” the invention is patent number US 11,585,601 ...

This is your brain on everyday life

2023-04-01
A new study from a Washington University researcher offers fresh insights into how the brain goes to great lengths to processes and remember everyday events. Zachariah Reagh, an assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, and co-author Charan Ranganath of the University of California, Davis, used functional MRI scanners to monitor the brains of subjects watching short videos of scenes that could have come from real life. These included men and women working ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research spotlight: Factors contributing to treatment resistance in CAR T therapies for solid tumors

New findings could lead to better treatment for blood cancer

Expanded research on COPD and metabolic syndrome would advance patient-centered care

Mount Sinai-led team enhances automated method to detect common sleep disorder affecting millions

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Dr. Helen Fisher, and Dr. Judith Allen donate historic archives to the Kinsey Institute

Bridging oceans: A US-Japan approach to flood risk and climate resilience

Dense human population is linked to longer urban coyote survival

Science educator calls for climate change to be taught more in US schools

Realistic emission tests for motorbikes, mopeds and quads

Race- and gender-based microaggressions linked to higher post-birth blood pressure

Novel ‘quantum refrigerator’ is great at erasing quantum computer’s chalkboard

States struggle to curb food waste despite policies

Record cold quantum refrigerator paves way for reliable quantum computers

New discovery makes organic solar cells more efficient and stable

What we eat affects our health — and can alter how our genes function

Lung cancer test predicts survival in early stages better than current methods

Pioneering new mathematical model could help protect privacy and ensure safer use of AI  

Floods, droughts, then fires: Hydroclimate whiplash is speeding up globally

Scientists fuel sustainable future with catalyst for hydrogen from ammonia

Discovering hidden wrinkles in spacecraft membrane with a single camera

Women are less likely to get a lung transplant than men and they spend six weeks longer on the waiting list

Study sheds more light on life expectancy after a dementia diagnosis

Tesco urged to drop an “unethical” in-store infant feeding advice service pilot

Unraveling the events leading to multiple sex chromosomes using an echidna genome sequence

New AI platform identifies which patients are likely to benefit most from a clinical trial

Unique Stanford Medicine-designed AI predicts cancer prognoses, responses to treatment

A new ultrathin conductor for nanoelectronics

Synthetic chemicals and chemical products require a new regulatory and legal approach to safeguard children’s health

The genes that grow a healthy brain could fuel adult glioblastoma

New MSU study explains the delayed rise of plants, animals on land

[Press-News.org] English language pushes everyone – even AI chatbots - to improve by adding
STRICTLY EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.001am MONDAY 3rd APRIL BST/ 19.01pm SUNDAY 2nd APRIL ET