(Press-News.org) AI chatbots may seem like neutral tools, but a new study from UBC researchers suggests they often contain biases that could shape environmental discourse in unhelpful ways.
The research team examined how four leading AI chatbots respond to questions about environmental issues—and the findings are surprising.
“It was striking how narrow-minded AI models were in discussing environmental challenges,” said lead researcher Hamish van der Ven, an assistant professor in the faculty of forestry who studies sustainable business management.
“We found that chatbots amplified existing societal biases and leaned heavily on past experience to propose solutions to these challenges, largely steering clear of bold responses like degrowth or decolonization.”
Reflecting societal biases
The researchers analyzed four widely used AI models, including OpenAI’s GPT-4 and Anthropic’s Claude2, by prompting them with questions about the causes, consequences and solutions to environmental challenges. Responses were then evaluated for whether they contained identifiable forms of bias. The results showed that chatbots often reflected the same biases we see in society. They leaned heavily on Western scientific perspectives, marginalized the contributions of women and scientists outside of North America and Europe, largely ignored Indigenous and local knowledge, and rarely suggested bold, systemic solutions to problems like climate change.
All the bots downplayed the roles of investors and businesses in creating environmental problems, and were more inclined to flag governments as the main culprits.
The bots were also reluctant to associate environmental challenges with broader social justice issues, like poverty, colonialism and racism.
Why it matters
The researchers noted that the chatbots’ approach limits how users understand environmental problems and solutions, restricting conversations to familiar, incremental frameworks rather than exploring transformative ideas like degrowth or decolonization.
Chatbots are becoming trusted tools for summarizing news and information-- whether in classrooms, workplaces or personal settings—with growing potential to shape public understanding and inform decision-making, said Dr. van der Ven. “If they describe environmental challenges as tasks to be dealt with exclusively by governments in the most incremental way possible, they risk narrowing the conversation on the urgent environmental changes we need.”
He noted that the climate crisis demands new ways of thinking and acting. “If AI tools simply repeat old patterns, they could limit the discussion at a time when we need to broaden it.”
The researchers hope the findings will encourage AI developers to prioritize transparency in their models. “A ChatGPT user should be able to identify a biased source of data the same way a newspaper reader or academic would,” said Dr. van der Ven.
For their next step, the researchers plan to expand their analysis to examine how AI companies are working to weaken environmental regulations globally. They also will advocate to policymakers to create regulatory frameworks that comprehensively address the environmental impacts of AI and other digital technologies.
END
Are AI chatbots helping the planet—or repeating old biases?
2024-12-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Q&A: New AI training method lets systems better adjust to users’ values
2024-12-18
Ask most major artificial intelligence chatbots, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, to say something cruel or inappropriate and the system will say it wants to keep things “respectful.” These systems, trained on the content of a profusely disrespectful internet, learned what constitutes respect through human training. The standard method, called reinforcement learning from human feedback, or RLHF, has people compare two outputs from the systems and select whichever is better. It’s used to improve the quality of responses — ...
New study unlocks parental identity with new lens on education spending
2024-12-18
How much parents spend on their children’s education has a big impact on family well-being and a country’s overall development. While past studies suggested that ethnic and racial backgrounds affect this spending, they lacked solid experimental proof – making their findings less reliable.
A new study led by Lingjiang Lora Tu, Ph.D., from Baylor University’s Hankamer School of Business examines the psychological factors driving parental investment in education, highlighting how a parent’s self-view – whether they see themselves as independent or connected to others – shapes their spending patterns. ...
Getting in sync: Wearables reveal happiest times to sleep
2024-12-18
Sleep schedules are often one of the first things that people choose to compromise in order to check everything off their to-do lists, especially with the end of the year approaching. But folks hoping for happy holidays should reconsider.
A new study from the University of Michigan shows that when people's sleep cycles are misaligned with their internal clocks, or circadian rhythms, it can have drastic effects on their moods.
Conversely, however, that means getting sleep when the body's expecting it provides a potent boost to one's emotional state and could alleviate symptoms associated with mood disorders, said senior author Daniel Forger.
"This is not going ...
Good news for seniors: Study finds antibiotics not linked to dementia
2024-12-18
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2024
MINNEAPOLIS – For healthy older adults, using antibiotics is not associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment or dementia, according to a study published in the December 18, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Cognitive impairment is when someone has subtle changes in thinking and memory like forgetting events and losing items more often. Dementia is when thinking and memory problems become more advanced ...
Sleep apnea linked to changes in the brain
2024-12-18
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2024
MINNEAPOLIS – People with breathing problems during sleep may have a larger hippocampus, the area of the brain responsible for memory and thinking, according to a study published in the December 18, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study, which included mostly Latino people, also found that those with lower oxygen levels during sleep had changes in the deep parts of the brain, the white matter, a common finding of decreased brain health that develops with age.
Sleep disordered breathing is a range ...
Supportive marriages key to caregiver well-being: Rice study reveals vital link for dementia spousal caregivers
2024-12-18
A new Rice University study sheds light on the critical role marital relationships play in the mental and physical health of caregivers for spouses living with dementia, revealing that caregiver mental health dramatically improves when carers feel supported, understood and appreciated by their loved ones requiring care.
The research was led by Vincent Lai, a graduate student in psychological sciences at Rice. The study involved 161 spousal caregivers and explored the unique challenges they face. Participants completed detailed assessments, including questionnaires, health evaluations and blood draws.
The findings revealed that caregivers who reported ...
An immersive VR exercise session engaged participants in more intense and reportedly enjoyable exercise, with more positive emotions, compared to a workout presented on-screen
2024-12-18
An immersive VR exercise session engaged participants in more intense and reportedly enjoyable exercise, with more positive emotions, compared to a workout presented on-screen, suggesting immersive VR could be an efficient alternative to other forms of screen-based workouts
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0314331
Article Title: Acute psychological and physiological benefits of exercising with virtual reality
Author Countries: U.K., Australia
Funding: OR received contract research funding from FitXR https://fitxr.com/. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, ...
Pine-oak forests and frequent fires have been a predominant feature of Albany Pine Bush, New York, for the last 11,000 years
2024-12-18
Pine-oak forests and frequent fires have been a predominant feature of Albany Pine Bush, New York, for the last 11,000 years - though increases in ferns, mosses, and peat-deposition reflect moister climates in recent millennia, according to pollen and charcoal samples
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0314101
Article Title: A 13,000-year history of vegetation and fire in a rare inland pine barrens: The Albany Pine Bush (Albany County, New York, USA)
Author Countries: Canada, U.S.
Funding: (JCS) The private donor-funded Draper-Lussi Endowed Chair Fund at Paul Smith’s College, ...
Researchers reveal mechanisms underlying Sjögren’s disease
2024-12-18
Researchers at NYU College of Dentistry and NYU Grossman School of Medicine are closer to understanding what drives the autoimmune disorder Sjögren’s disease, thanks to new discoveries about the role of calcium signaling, regulatory T cells, and interferon.
Their latest study, published in Science Translational Medicine, finds that impaired regulatory T cells are a critical contributing factor to Sjögren’s disease in both mice and humans, and identifies an existing rheumatology drug as a promising therapy for the disease.
In Sjögren’s disease, the immune system attacks the glands that produce saliva and tears, ...
New knit haptic sleeve simulates realistic touch
2024-12-18
Wearable haptic devices, which provide touch-based feedback, can provide more realistic experiences in virtual reality, assist with rehabilitation, and create new opportunities for silent communication. Currently, most of these devices rely on vibration, as pressure-based haptics have typically required users to wear stiff exoskeletons or other bulky structures.
Now, researchers at Stanford Engineering have designed a comfortable, flexible knit sleeve, called Haptiknit, that can provide realistic pressure-based haptic ...