photo_camera Jacy Reese Anthis / Midjourney
Widely varying shades of blue in an abstract cubist style. There is a very slight hint of what may be two highly abstract faces with intense cubism, a human and a robot, with their eyes closed. --ar 16:5 --v 7.0
Perceptions of Sentient AI and Other Digital Minds: Evidence from the AI, Morality, and Sentience (AIMS) Survey
Jacy Reese Anthis
Co-Founder
Janet Pauketat
Research Fellow
Ali Ladak
Researcher
Katerina Manoli
Researcher
April 25, 2025

We are pleased to announce our latest peer-reviewed publication, “Perceptions of Sentient AI and Other Digital Minds: Evidence from the AI, Morality, and Sentience (AIMS) Survey,” in the Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.

Abstract

Humans now interact with a variety of digital minds, AI systems that appear to have mental faculties such as reasoning, emotion, and agency, and public figures are discussing the possibility of sentient AI. We present initial results from 2021 and 2023 for the nationally representative AI, Morality, and Sentience (AIMS) survey (N = 3,500). Mind perception and moral concern for AI welfare were surprisingly high and significantly increased: in 2023, one in five U.S. adults believed some AI systems are currently sentient, and 38% supported legal rights for sentient AI. People became more opposed to building digital minds: in 2023, 63% supported banning smarter-than-human AI, and 69% supported banning sentient AI. The median 2023 forecast was that sentient AI would arrive in just five years. The development of safe and beneficial AI requires not just technical study but understanding the complex ways in which humans perceive and coexist with digital minds.

The paper is available open access on the ACM website: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3706598.3713329

A preprint version is available on ArXiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.08867


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