“ChatGPT says no”: agency, trust, and blame in Twitter discourses after the launch of ChatGPT
ChatGPT, a chatbot using the GPT-n series large language model, has surged in popularity by providing conversation, assistance, and entertainment. This has raised questions about its agency and resulting implications on trust and blame, particularly when concerning its portrayal on social media platforms like Twitter. Understanding trust and blame is crucial for gauging public perception, reliance on, and adoption of AI-driven tools like ChatGPT. To explore ChatGPT’s perceived status as an algorithmic social actor and uncover implications for trust and blame through agency and transitivity, we examined 88,058 tweets about ChatGPT, published in a ‘hype period’ between November 2022 and March 2023, using Corpus Linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis, underpinned by Social Actor Representation. Notably, ChatGPT was presented in tweets as a social actor on 87% of occasions, using personalisation and agency metaphor to emphasise its role in content creation, information dissemination, and influence. However, a dynamic presentation, oscillating between a creative social actor and an information source, reflected users’ uncertainty regarding its capabilities and, thus, blame attribution occurred. On 13% of occasions, ChatGPT was presented passively through backgrounding and exclusion. Here, the emphasis on ChatGPT’s role in informing and influencing underscores interactors’ reliance on it for information, bearing implications for information dissemination and trust in AI-generated content. Therefore, this study contributes to understanding the perceived social agency of decision-making algorithms and their implications on trust and blame, valuable to AI developers and policymakers and relevant in comprehending and dealing with power dynamics in today’s age of AI.
Funding
UKRI Grant No. EP/V00784X/1. Dan Heaton is supported by UKRI Grant No. EP/S023305/1
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Management (Research Outputs)
- College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
- Lincoln International Business School (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
AI and EthicsVolume
5Pages/Article Number
653–675Publisher
SpringerExternal DOI
ISSN
2730-5953eISSN
2730-5961Date Submitted
2023-11-13Date Accepted
2023-12-18Date of First Publication
2024-01-23Date of Final Publication
2025-02-28Open Access Status
- Open Access
Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?
- N/A