Trust and Reliance in Consensus-Based Explanations from an Anti-Misinformation Agent

April 22, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› CHI Extended Abstracts

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Authors Takane Ueno, Yeongdae Kim, Hiroki Oura, Katie Seaborn arXiv ID 2304.11279 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.SI Citations 10 Venue CHI Extended Abstracts Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
The illusion of consensus occurs when people believe there is consensus across multiple sources, but the sources are the same and thus there is no "true" consensus. We explore this phenomenon in the context of an AI-based intelligent agent designed to augment metacognition on social media. Misinformation, especially on platforms like Twitter, is a global problem for which there is currently no good solution. As an explainable AI (XAI) system, the agent provides explanations for its decisions on the misinformed nature of social media content. In this late-breaking study, we explored the roles of trust (attitude) and reliance (behaviour) as key elements of XAI user experience (UX) and whether these influenced the illusion of consensus. Findings show no effect of trust, but an effect of reliance on consensus-based explanations. This work may guide the design of anti-misinformation systems that use XAI, especially the user-centred design of explanations.
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