For subscribers

AI can debunk conspiracy theories better than humans

Unlike humans, AI can match believers with instant mountains of counter-evidence and swiftly point out logical flaws.

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The most important revelation wasn’t about the power of AI, but about the workings of the human mind.

The most important revelation wasn’t about the power of AI, but about the workings of the human mind.

PHOTO: REUTERS

F.D. Flam

Follow topic:

Scientists surprised themselves when they found they could instruct a version of ChatGPT to gently dissuade people of their beliefs in conspiracy theories – such as notions that Covid-19 was a deliberate attempt at population control or that 9/11 was an inside job.

The most important revelation wasn’t about the power of artificial intelligence (AI), but about the workings of the human mind. The experiment punctured the popular myth that we’re in a post-truth era where evidence no longer matters, and it flew in the face of a prevailing view in psychology that people cling to conspiracy theories for emotional reasons and that no amount of evidence can ever disabuse them.

See more on