Chatbots and mental health: Insights into the safety of generative AI

Author:

De Freitas Julian1ORCID,Uğuralp Ahmet Kaan2ORCID,Oğuz‐Uğuralp Zeliha3ORCID,Puntoni Stefano4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marketing Harvard Business School Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Computer Science Bilkent University Ankara Turkey

3. Psychology Bilkent University Ankara Turkey

4. Marketing University of Pennsylvania Wharton School Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractChatbots are now able to engage in sophisticated conversations with consumers. Due to the “black box” nature of the algorithms, it is impossible to predict in advance how these conversations will unfold. Behavioral research provides little insight into potential safety issues emerging from the current rapid deployment of this technology at scale. We begin to address this urgent question by focusing on the context of mental health and “companion AI”: Applications designed to provide consumers with synthetic interaction partners. Studies 1a and 1b present field evidence: Actual consumer interactions with two different companion AIs. Study 2 reports an extensive performance test of several commercially available companion AIs. Study 3 is an experiment testing consumer reaction to risky and unhelpful chatbot responses. The findings show that (1) mental health crises are apparent in a nonnegligible minority of conversations with users; (2) companion AIs are often unable to recognize, and respond appropriately to, signs of distress; and (3) consumers display negative reactions to unhelpful and risky chatbot responses, highlighting emerging reputational risks for generative AI companies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Marketing,Applied Psychology

Reference42 articles.

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