AI trained on novels tracks how racist and sexist biases have evolved

You May Be Interested In:Cloudflare turns AI against itself with endless maze of irrelevant facts


Books can document the cultural biases of the era when they were published

Ann Taylor/Alamy

Artificial intelligences picking up sexist and racist biases is a well-known and persistent problem, but researchers are now turning this to their advantage to analyse social attitudes through history. Training AI models on novels from a certain decade can instil them with the prejudices of that era, offering a new way to study how cultural biases have evolved over time.

Large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT learn by analysing large collections of text. They tend to inherit the biases found within their training data:…

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Images of iPhones, one showing mail sorted into a "Primary" category, the other showing all emails from United Ailines, with a sizable United logo at the top.
Report: Apple Mail is getting automatic categories on iPadOS and macOS
The opening moments of TED AI 2024 in San Francisco on October 22, 2024.
At TED AI 2024, experts grapple with AI’s growing pains
Google Stadia will support “a variety of business models”
Google Stadia will support “a variety of business models”
Ultra-strong stretchy material could enable shape-shifting aircraft
Ultra-strong stretchy material could enable shape-shifting aircraft
SAN FRANCISCO - SEPTEMBER 20: Freshly printed copies of the San Francisco Chronicle run through the printing press at one of the Chronicle
Nexus review: Yuval Noah Harari is out of his depth in his new book
Ars’ next conference is coming October 29 in Washington, D.C.
Ars’ next conference is coming October 29 in Washington, D.C.
The News Spectrum | © 2025 | News