Comparing Moral Values in Western English-speaking societies and LLMs with Word Associations
Comparing Moral Values in Western English-speaking societies and LLMs with Word Associations
As the impact of large language models increases, understanding the moral values they reflect becomes ever more important. Assessing the nature of moral values as understood by these models via direct prompting is challenging due to potential leakage of human norms into model training data, and their sensitivity to prompt formulation. Instead, we propose to use word associations, which have been shown to reflect moral reasoning in humans, as low-level underlying representations to obtain a more robust picture of LLMs' moral reasoning. We study moral differences in associations from western English-speaking communities and LLMs trained predominantly on English data. First, we create a large dataset of LLM-generated word associations, resembling an existing data set of human word associations. Next, we propose a novel method to propagate moral values based on seed words derived from Moral Foundation Theory through the human and LLM-generated association graphs. Finally, we compare the resulting moral conceptualizations, highlighting detailed but systematic differences between moral values emerging from English speakers and LLM associations.
Chaoyi Xiang、Chunhua Liu、Simon De Deyne、Lea Frermann
计算技术、计算机技术
Chaoyi Xiang,Chunhua Liu,Simon De Deyne,Lea Frermann.Comparing Moral Values in Western English-speaking societies and LLMs with Word Associations[EB/OL].(2025-05-26)[2025-06-19].https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.19674.点此复制
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