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Emergent social conventions and collective bias in LLM populations

Computer Science

Emergent social conventions and collective bias in LLM populations

A. F. Ashery, L. M. Aiello, et al.

Experimental results show that decentralized populations of large language model agents can spontaneously develop universally adopted social conventions, produce strong collective biases even from unbiased individuals, and enable committed minority adversarial agents to impose alternative norms—research conducted by Ariel Flint Ashery, Luca Maria Aiello, and Andrea Baronchelli.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Social conventions are the backbone of social coordination, shaping how individuals form a group. As growing populations of artificial intelligence (AI) agents communicate through natural language, a fundamental question is whether they can bootstrap the foundations of a society. Here, we present experimental results that demonstrate the spontaneous emergence of universally adopted social conventions in decentralized populations of large language model (LLM) agents. We then show how strong collective biases can emerge during this process, even when agents exhibit no bias individually. Last, we examine how committed minority groups of adversarial LLM agents can drive social change by imposing alternative social conventions on the larger population. Our results show that AI systems can autonomously develop social conventions without explicit programming and have implications for designing AI systems that align, and remain aligned, with human values and societal goals.
Publisher
Science Advances
Published On
May 14, 2025
Authors
Ariel Flint Ashery, Luca Maria Aiello, Andrea Baronchelli
Tags
social conventions
large language models
decentralized populations
emergent behavior
collective bias
committed minority influence
AI alignment
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