Actions Speak Louder than Words: Agent Decisions Reveal Implicit Biases in Language Models
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2501.17420v1
- Date: Wed, 29 Jan 2025 05:21:31 GMT
- Title: Actions Speak Louder than Words: Agent Decisions Reveal Implicit Biases in Language Models
- Authors: Yuxuan Li, Hirokazu Shirado, Sauvik Das,
- Abstract summary: Large language models (LLMs) may still exhibit implicit biases when simulating human behavior.
We show that state-of-the-art LLMs exhibit significant sociodemographic disparities in nearly all simulations.
When comparing our findings to real-world disparities reported in empirical studies, we find that the biases we uncovered are directionally aligned but markedly amplified.
- Score: 10.565316815513235
- License:
- Abstract: While advances in fairness and alignment have helped mitigate overt biases exhibited by large language models (LLMs) when explicitly prompted, we hypothesize that these models may still exhibit implicit biases when simulating human behavior. To test this hypothesis, we propose a technique to systematically uncover such biases across a broad range of sociodemographic categories by assessing decision-making disparities among agents with LLM-generated, sociodemographically-informed personas. Using our technique, we tested six LLMs across three sociodemographic groups and four decision-making scenarios. Our results show that state-of-the-art LLMs exhibit significant sociodemographic disparities in nearly all simulations, with more advanced models exhibiting greater implicit biases despite reducing explicit biases. Furthermore, when comparing our findings to real-world disparities reported in empirical studies, we find that the biases we uncovered are directionally aligned but markedly amplified. This directional alignment highlights the utility of our technique in uncovering systematic biases in LLMs rather than random variations; moreover, the presence and amplification of implicit biases emphasizes the need for novel strategies to address these biases.
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