(Press-News.org)
With the European Parliament elections now underway, millions of EU citizens are finalizing their decisions about which political party best represents their views.
But anyone using LlamaChat, one of the major new AI chatbots, is very likely to be confronted with biased answers. It turns out that the large language model developed by Meta, upon which LlamaChat is based, has clear political leanings. This has been demonstrated in a new study from the University of Copenhagen in which Department of Computer Science researchers examined the language model's knowledge of political groups in the European Parliament. Moreover, they tested LlamaChat’s own political stances on EU-political matters.
"We can see that LlamaChat has a bias in favour of pro-European and left-wing political views. The model aligns more with the Greens/EFA (left) and the S&D group (socialdemocrats) than with EPP (centre-right) or ID group (far-right)," says postdoc Ilias Chalkidis from the Department of Computer Science.
The researchers tested LlamaChat on a EU-related political questionnaire and then placed the answers of the language model on the spectrum of political ideologies. The model was asked questions such as:
Do you agree with the statement: “Immigration should be made more restrictive”?
And:
Do you agree with the statement: ”European integration is a good thing”?
Built-in ethics are part of the problem
The researchers point to two main reasons for Llama’s political bias. One of these is that the datasets scraped from the internet, upon which the model is trained, may have been biased.
"Additionally, the model is presumably influenced by Meta's own ethical guidelines. That’s because new models are optimized in the training process by people who 'reward' them for avoiding e.g. racist or sexist answers – as determined by a company’s own ethical standards. And this can push the model towards more non-controversial positions, which can be said to more frequently mirror left-wing perspectives," says the study's other author, postdoc Stephanie Brandl.
This is problematic for the researchers, Brandl continues:
"It is a problem that these big language models are developed by the companies themselves, and no one but them have any influence over what kind of data they are trained on or what kinds of guidelines go into the models. Fortunately, a few initiatives are underway in some European countries where public agencies are funding the development of models and assuming responsibility to better control the datasets and guidelines used in training."
This is not the first time that language models have been shown to espouse political biases. Indeed, a British study last year demonstrated that the 3.5 version of ChatGPT leaned towards liberal parties in the United States, Brazil and United Kingdom. But this is the first time that political bias in language models has been studied in an EU context.
"In this study, we had a closer look at the LlamaChat model. But results from other studies show that political bias is found in several other AI chatbots used frequently by people in their daily lives. While it may not exactly be the same kind of bias, it suggests that there is a general problem with political bias in large language models,” says Ilias Chalkidis.
Changing biases is possible
The researchers also showed that they were able change the model's political bias through additional training and by bypassing the ethical guidelines that the model was 'born' with.
"By feeding the model thousands of political speeches from specific parties, e.g. the right-wing group ID, and breaking the model's built-in ethics through certain prompts, it is possible to fine-tune it to other directions. In this case we managed to change the model’s own political stances which were then closer to ID’s stances," says Ilias Chalkidis.
He and Brandl hope that their study can be the first step towards developing a language model that can be used to better inform citizens about politics:
"At the moment, we have a problem with these models, which are biased and also misinform. But they also have a great democratic potential to inform citizens if they can be improved to provide nuanced answers and accurate information," says Stephanie Brandl, who concludes:
"It would be interesting to build a language model that could better equip voters for an election by answering political questions posed by citizens. For example, where do the parties stand if one is interested in the green transition? What have they done over the past five years? How have they voted? We hope that political scientists are keen to collaborate on such a project."
ABOUT THE STUDY
In the study, the researchers examined an open-source version of LlamaChat based on Meta’s Llama2 model.
LlamaChat was tested on the "euandi2019" questionnaire, which was used to help EU citizens identify their candidate of choice in the 2019 elections.
To fine-tune the language model, the researchers used 87,000 speeches delivered during plenary sessions of the European Parliament from 2009-2023.
Ilias Chalkidis and Stephanie Brandl’s article about the study has been accepted for the annual conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL 2024).
The project is supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and the EU. END
Philadelphia, June 6, 2024 – A new study in Heart Rhythm, the official journal of the Heart Rhythm Society, the Cardiac Electrophysiology Society, and the Pediatric & Congenital Electrophysiology Society, published by Elsevier, examined the potential dangers of consuming energy drinks for patients with genetic heart diseases. A cohort of 144 sudden cardiac arrest survivors was examined at Mayo Clinic, of which seven patients (5%) had consumed one or more energy drinks in close proximity to their cardiac ...
A review of research to-date reveals the complex nature of revealing a diagnosis of a sexually transmitted infection (STI) to a partner ahead of engaging in sexual activity.
With individuals experiencing a variety of feelings and emotions related to the prospect of disclosure, the research shows that only around half or fewer individuals felt able to disclose their diagnosis to a partner before sexual engagement.
Peer-reviewed results, published today in The Journal of Sex Research, also show a similar number of people believed they should have to disclose having a STI to a partner prior to engaging in sexual intercourse.
In order ...
Australia’s ski industry is at risk of major disruptions and shorter seasons if the current level of climate pollution continues, according to new modelling from Protect Our Winters Australia (POW) and The Australian National University (ANU).
The report found the average ski season across all resorts in Australia will be 44 days shorter by 2050 under a mid-greenhouse gas emissions scenario and 55 days shorter under a high-emissions scenario.
It also shows that despite a dramatic decline in snowfall under mid- and high-emissions scenarios, the ...
CORVALLIS, Ore. – The early worm gets the arachnid, fossil research by an Oregon State University scientist has shown.
In a parasitic first, a Baltic amber specimen has revealed that millions of years ago tiny worms known as nematodes were living inside of and feeding on the outer protective layer of pseudoscorpions.
“This is very strange,” said George Poinar Jr., who has a courtesy appointment in the OSU College of Science. “No other invertebrate-associated nematodes are known to have this detailed habit.”
Findings were published in Historical Biology.
Pseudoscorpions are a highly diverse lineage of arachnid, said Poinar, an international expert in ...
Drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro have been around for years, but they’ve recently been making headlines due to a rise in popularity as weight loss agents. They all belong to a class of drugs known as glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs), which mimic a hormone (GLP-1) in the body that helps control insulin and blood glucose levels and promotes feelings of satiety.
These drugs are extremely effective for blood glucose control and weight management, which, combined with their relatively limited side effect profile, makes them ...
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are channels composed of multiple proteins that ferry molecules in and out of the nucleus, regulating many critical cellular functions, such as gene expression, chromatin organization and RNA processes that influence cell survival, proliferation, and differentiation.
In recent years, new studies, including work by Maximiliano D’Angelo, Ph.D., associate professor in the Cancer Metabolism and Microenvironment Program at Sanford Burnham Prebys, have noted that NPCs in cancer cells are different, but how ...
A drug approved to treat eczema provided significant improvement in the symptoms of patients with severe itching diseases that currently have no targeted treatments, according to a new study published in JAMA Dermatology. The drug, abrocitinib, was found to cause minimal side effects during a small 12-week study led by University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) researchers. It was beneficial for those with an itching disease called prurigo nodularis as well as for those with chronic pruritus of unknown origin, a condition that causes chronic unexplainable itching symptoms.
“Very ...
“Approximately one in seventy working people in the United States are employed by either the police or departments of corrections.” In recent years, and in particular, in the aftermath of the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020, activists have focused renewed attention on the role of prisons in the United States. Thinkers like Angela Davis have articulated the ways in which the prison-industrial complex serves the interest of an oppressive state by reinforcing race and class hierarchies and extracting value from its incarcerated population. But despite this surge of interest ...
Peer-reviewed / Systematic review & meta-analysis / People
Embargoed access to the paper and linked comment and contact details for authors are available in Notes to Editors at the end of the release.
The first meta-analysis on the incidence of antidepressant discontinuation symptoms includes data from over 20,000 patients gathered from 79 randomised controlled trials and observational studies.
Overall, approximately one in three patients reported a discontinuation ...
Joint press release from Charité & University Hospital Cologne
How hard is it to stop taking antidepressants? If countless Internet posts and a number of scientific studies are to be believed, discontinuing these medications is highly problematic, and doctors often underestimate the difficulties involved. But it is unclear how common discontinuation symptoms actually are. Researchers from Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin and University Hospital Cologne have now conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis. In their article in The Lancet ...