Jan. 6, 2012 - According to a report in Live Science 4, a new study finds that the relationship between the AI The model carries on a two-hour conversation and is able to accurately replicate a person's personality.

The study comes from Google andStanford UniversityIn a study of the AI model, they created "simulated agents" - personalized replicas of the AI - by conducting two-hour interviews with 1,052 participants. These interviews were used to train a generative AI model that mimickedHumanbehavior.
To verify the accuracy of the AI replicas, each participant completed theTwo rounds of personality tests, social surveys and logic gamesThe AI "replicas" were then given the same tests again two weeks later. When the AI "replicas" performed these tests, their responses wereAccuracy of match to real participants as high as 85%.
The researchers believe that an AI model that can mimic human behavior could be useful in several areas of research. For example, it could helpEvaluating the effectiveness of public health policies, understanding the public's reaction to product releases, and even modeling responses to major social events, which are difficult to study through real people's participation due to high costs, operational complexity or ethical issues.
In the paper, the researchers mentioned, "Simulating human attitudes and behaviors could provide researchers with an experimental platform forTesting interventions and theories. Each simulated individual is able to participate in a different social, political or informational context." They add that such simulations can also help pilot new policies, explore the interaction of causal and contextual factors, and deepen our understanding of how institutions and networks affect people.
Researchers are also aware of the potential for misuse of this technology, as AI and "deep faking" techniques have been used by crooks toFraud, impersonation and manipulation of persons. Analog agents can also be misused.
However, they argue that this technology provides us with a previously unattainable way to study human behavior, being able to conduct experiments in highly controlled test environments, theAvoids the ethical, logistical and interpersonal problems of traditional human experimentation.
Attached paper address:Click here to go