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In developing artificial intelligence (AI), researchers often benchmark against human performance as a measure of progress. Is this kind of comparison possible for moral cognition? Given that human moral judgment often hinges on intangible properties like "intention" which may have no natural analog in artificial agents, it may prove difficult to design a "like-for-like" comparison between the moral behavior of artificial and human agents. What would a measure of moral behavior for both humans and AI look like? We unravel the complexity of this question by discussing examples within reinforcement learning and generative AI, and we examine how the puzzle of evaluating artificial agents' moral cognition remains open for further investigation within cognitive science.

Original publication

DOI

10.1111/cogs.13315

Type

Other

Publication Date

08/2023

Volume

47

Keywords

Artificial intelligence, Moral cognition, Multi-agent reinforcement learning, Humans, Artificial Intelligence, Cognition, Morals, Judgment, Learning