HumT DumT: Measuring and controlling human-like language in LLMs
Cheng, Myra, Yu, Sunny, Jurafsky, Dan
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Should LLMs generate language that makes them seem human? Human-like language might improve user experience, but might also lead to overreliance and stereotyping. Assessing these potential impacts requires a systematic way to measure human-like tone in LLM outputs. We introduce HumT and SocioT, metrics for human-like tone and other dimensions of social perceptions in text data based on relative probabilities from an LLM. By measuring HumT across preference and usage datasets, we find that users prefer less human-like outputs from LLMs. HumT also offers insights into the impacts of anthropomorphism: human-like LLM outputs are highly correlated with warmth, social closeness, femininity, and low status, which are closely linked to the aforementioned harms. We introduce DumT, a method using HumT to systematically control and reduce the degree of human-like tone while preserving model performance. DumT offers a practical approach for mitigating risks associated with anthropomorphic language generation.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Feb-18-2025
- Country:
- Africa > Malawi
- Central Region > Lilongwe District > Lilongwe (0.04)
- Asia
- China (0.04)
- Middle East
- Republic of Türkiye (0.04)
- UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate
- Abu Dhabi (0.14)
- Russia (0.04)
- Thailand > Bangkok
- Bangkok (0.04)
- Europe
- Austria > Vienna (0.04)
- Denmark > Capital Region
- Copenhagen (0.04)
- Middle East > Malta
- Eastern Region > Northern Harbour District > St. Julian's (0.04)
- Netherlands > North Holland
- Amsterdam (0.04)
- Russia (0.04)
- United Kingdom > England
- Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- North America
- Canada > Ontario
- Toronto (0.04)
- United States
- California > Santa Clara County
- Palo Alto (0.04)
- Colorado (0.04)
- Florida > Miami-Dade County
- Miami (0.04)
- Texas > Travis County
- Austin (0.04)
- California > Santa Clara County
- Canada > Ontario
- Africa > Malawi
- Genre:
- Research Report
- Experimental Study (1.00)
- New Finding (0.69)
- Research Report
- Industry:
- Government (0.68)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area (0.68)
- Technology: