Artificial intelligence (AI) has been widely discussed in societies worldwide since the launch of the ChatGPT by Open AI. Although AI has been built into many products, such as smartphones or social robots, for many years, the rise of generative artificial intelligence has led to massive media coverage. This underlines the growing need to understand scientifically how AI in its many forms impacts the human mind. Therefore, the present talk provides an overview on how to assess attitudes to artificial intelligence. The IMPACT framework (Interplay of Modality, Person, Area, Country/Culture and Transparency categories) also sheds light on how AI might impact attitude formation and user well-being. In this context, it will be explained a) how age, gender, personality and culture are linked to positive/negative attitudes toward AI, and b) how attitudes towards AI are linked to trust in automation, the latter being an established concept in the scientific literature. In addition, new work sheds light on how attitudes toward AI are linked to trust in ChatGPT by Open AI and trust in the Ernie Bot by Baidu.
Post Talk Link: Click Here
Passcode: $6k??#ej
Christian Montag works at the intersection of psychology, neuroscience, behavioral economics and computer science. He is particularly interested in digital phenotyping, mobile sensing, and digital biomarkers. Moreover, he studies technological use disorders and attempts to understand how social media can be improved. In his most recent works, he focused on the question of how interaction with AI impacts the human mind. Christian Montag received his diploma in psychology in September 2006. In 2009, he achieved his PhD, and in 2011, the venia legendi for psychology. As a post doc he also carried out research at the SCAN lab at Stony Brook University, NY, USA. Since September 2014, he has been a Professor for Molecular Psychology at Ulm University, Ulm, Germany (W3). From to 2016-2022 he was a visiting professor at the Neuscan lab at the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China in Chengdu, China. He is a (co-)author of 355 peer-reviewed international papers and currently serves on the editorial board of Personality Neuroscience, Molecular Psychology, Digital Psychology, and Addictive Behaviors journals. He is a co-editor of the book series “Studies in Neuroscience, Psychology and Behavioral Economics” at Springer. His current H-index is 76, with more than 18.600 citations (Google Scholar, 23rd October 2023). Montag’s research and insights are often covered by German and international media (such as in the past by The New York Times, CNN, and Forbes).
Read More
Read More