Tag: Ethics and Social Impacts of AI
AI drift is defined as authority-vacancy transition instability
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What the study found The paper defines AI drift as authority-vacancy transition instability under the absence of final arbitration. It presents AI drift as a lower condition than alignment: a pre-alignment instability in which authority assignment, refusal, world-binding, and editability have not stabilized. Why the authors say this matters The authors suggest that alignment should…

Global AI governance shows consensus around three principles
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in LawSociosemiotic analysis of 47 international AI governance documents reveals that consensus on core principles masks implementation gaps and actor tensions in global regulation.

Chinese undergraduates showed stronger AI ethics than technical skills
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Survey of 583 Chinese undergraduates validates the UNESCO AI Competency Framework, revealing stronger performance in ethics and mindset than technical skills, contradicting national priorities.

GenAI can improve consulting efficiency but raises risks
Qualitative study of German consulting firms examining how Task-GenAI Fit framework balances generative AI efficiency gains against risks like hallucinations and skill loss.

Men sought more advice and did better in the residency match
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Study reveals how gender differences in help-seeking behavior affect medical residency matching outcomes, showing men seek more independent advice about algorithms than women, leading to better.

Study maps how AI guardrails shape language and control
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Study examines how major AI companies implement guardrails as sociotechnical control mechanisms, revealing how code and language jointly regulate discourse in large language models.





