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Robots-Dont-Cry: Understanding Falsely Anthropomorphic Utterances in Dialog Systems

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arxiv 2210.12429 v1 pith:ZWQYVJMR submitted 2022-10-22 cs.CL

Robots-Dont-Cry: Understanding Falsely Anthropomorphic Utterances in Dialog Systems

classification cs.CL
keywords dialogmachinesystemsanthropomorphicratingsresponsesexplorefalsely
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Dialog systems are often designed or trained to output human-like responses. However, some responses may be impossible for a machine to truthfully say (e.g. "that movie made me cry"). Highly anthropomorphic responses might make users uncomfortable or implicitly deceive them into thinking they are interacting with a human. We collect human ratings on the feasibility of approximately 900 two-turn dialogs sampled from 9 diverse data sources. Ratings are for two hypothetical machine embodiments: a futuristic humanoid robot and a digital assistant. We find that for some data-sources commonly used to train dialog systems, 20-30% of utterances are not viewed as possible for a machine. Rating is marginally affected by machine embodiment. We explore qualitative and quantitative reasons for these ratings. Finally, we build classifiers and explore how modeling configuration might affect output permissibly, and discuss implications for building less falsely anthropomorphic dialog systems.

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