Skip to content

Pew Research: Public and AI Experts

🔗 Web

Unknown author

View Original ↗

Summary

A comprehensive study comparing perspectives of U.S. adults and AI experts on artificial intelligence's future, highlighting differences in optimism, job impacts, and regulatory concerns.

Review

The Pew Research report provides a nuanced exploration of how the American public and AI experts perceive artificial intelligence, uncovering substantial gaps in their expectations and attitudes. While AI experts are significantly more optimistic about AI's potential - with 56% believing it will have a positive impact compared to only 17% of the public - both groups share common concerns about regulation and personal control of the technology.

The study reveals critical insights into perceptions of AI across various domains, including job markets, societal impacts, and potential risks. Notably, gender differences emerge prominently, with male experts and members of the public displaying more enthusiasm about AI compared to women. The research also highlights shared skepticism about government and corporate ability to responsibly develop and regulate AI, with approximately 55-62% of both groups expressing low confidence in current oversight mechanisms.

Key Points

  • Significant optimism gap between AI experts (56% positive) and public (17% positive) about AI's future impact
  • Both groups want more personal control and are skeptical of government AI regulation
  • Gender differences in AI perception are pronounced, especially among experts
  • Shared concerns about AI include job displacement, inaccurate information, and potential bias

Cited By (2 articles)

← Back to Resources