
"A whopping 53 percent of just over 5,000 US adults polled in June think that AI will "worsen people's ability to think creatively." Fifty percent say AI will deteriorate our ability to form meaningful relationships, while only five percent believe the reverse. While 29 percent of respondents said they believe AI will make people better problem-solvers, 38 percent said it could worsen our ability to solve problems."
"According to Pew's latest poll, 53 percent of respondents said they were "not too or not at all confident" about their ability to discern between whether something was "made by AI versus a person." Yet 76 percent said it was "extremely or very important to be able to tell if pictures, videos and text were made by AI or people.""
"The "generally pessimistic" opinions about AI are significantly more widespread than they were before the advent of OpenAI's ChatGPT just under three years ago, Pew noted. Half of respondents said they were "more concerned than excited about the increased use of AI in daily life," an increase from just 37 percent in 2021. Only ten percent said they were "more excited than concerned," indicating that most Americans simply do not share the extremely optimistic views of tech leaders selling AI products."
A national poll of just over 5,000 US adults in June found 53% believe AI will worsen people's ability to think creatively. Fifty percent said AI will deteriorate ability to form meaningful relationships, while only five percent believed the reverse. Twenty-nine percent expected AI to improve problem-solving, while 38% expected a decline. Half said they were more concerned than excited about AI's increased use, up from 37% in 2021, and just 10% were more excited. Fifty-three percent lack confidence in discerning AI-made content, and 76% say identifying AI content is very important. Opinions have grown more pessimistic since ChatGPT's arrival.
Read at Futurism
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