Most people do not realize when a personal message they receive was written by AI, study finds
Most people do not realize when a personal message they receive was written by AI, study finds
Publish Date: 2026-04-20 08:33:00
Source Domain: theconversation.com
- The study investigated how people’s perceptions of a message’s author affect their judgment, focusing on AI-generated messages.
- Researchers recruited over 1,300 participants, ages 18 to 84, and presented them with AI-generated messages in different contexts regarding authorship.
- A significant “AI disclosure penalty” was found: disclosing AI authorship resulted in much more negative judgments of the sender compared to messages believed to be from humans.
- Surprisingly, participants not informed about the authorship formed similarly positive impressions as those who knew the messages were human-written, demonstrating a lack of inherent skepticism about AI authorship.
- Even frequent users of AI did not form inherently negative views about messages unless AI authorship was disclosed, indicating little baseline skepticism.
- This lack of skepticism and negative impressions can have significant social and professional implications, affecting perceptions in areas like friendships, dating, and job applications.
- The findings highlight a moral dilemma where secret use of AI can be beneficial without risks, but transparent use incurs reputational penalties.
- Current research and future steps aim to understand how and when skepticism towards AI-generated content naturally develops in real-world settings.