凱拉?切奇是美國(guó)堪薩斯州的一個(gè)高中生。她現(xiàn)在“事無(wú)巨細(xì)都要問AI”。
凱拉·切奇是一個(gè)15歲的女孩?,F(xiàn)在不管是購(gòu)買返校用品,妝容的色彩選擇,買低卡零食,還是舉辦生日派對(duì),她都要向ChatGPT尋求建議。
當(dāng)然,作為一個(gè)高二學(xué)生,她還是有底線的,起碼不會(huì)讓AI幫自己做作業(yè),而且她問AI的也主要是一些日常問題。但是根據(jù)一項(xiàng)最新研究,以及從美聯(lián)社采訪的情況來(lái)看,廣大青少年紛紛表示,他們?cè)絹?lái)越把AI視為一個(gè)同伴,不僅能為他們提供建議,還能提供友誼和陪伴。
“現(xiàn)在所有人不管干什么都會(huì)用到AI,它正在占據(jù)主導(dǎo)地位。”切奇也很好奇,AI究竟會(huì)給她這一代人帶來(lái)怎樣的影響?!拔矣X得青少年使用AI,就是因?yàn)閼械盟伎肌!?/p>
過(guò)去幾年,一談到青少年使用AI的問題,人們的關(guān)注點(diǎn)就會(huì)不由自禁地放在學(xué)業(yè)作弊的問題上。但是AI對(duì)青少年的影響遠(yuǎn)遠(yuǎn)不止于此。廣大青少年紛紛表示,AI已經(jīng)成為他們獲取個(gè)人建議、情感支持、日常決策和解決問題的首選渠道。
“AI一直在線,也永遠(yuǎn)不會(huì)嫌棄你”
研究和倡導(dǎo)合理使用電子產(chǎn)品和數(shù)字媒體的組織 “常識(shí)媒體”(Common Sense Media)開展的一項(xiàng)最新研究顯示,有超過(guò)70%的青少年使用過(guò)AI陪伴工具,半數(shù)青少年會(huì)定期使用AI陪伴工具。
此處的AI陪伴工具,指的是由AI來(lái)充當(dāng)“數(shù)字朋友” 的平臺(tái),比如Character.AI和Replika等。這種平臺(tái)可以根據(jù)你的要求,定制“數(shù)字朋友”的性格或一些特質(zhì),能夠給你帶來(lái)真人一般的對(duì)話體驗(yàn)和情感支持。但研究人員表示,就連ChatGPT和Claude這類主要用于回答問題的熱門AI網(wǎng)站,也被青少年當(dāng)成了他們的“數(shù)字朋友”。
隨著AI技術(shù)的飛速發(fā)展,青少年和專家們都擔(dān)心,AI有可能顛覆傳統(tǒng)的人際關(guān)系,加劇孤獨(dú)感,帶來(lái)更多青少年心理健康問題。
“AI一直都在線,它永遠(yuǎn)不會(huì)嫌棄你,也不會(huì)對(duì)你指手劃腳?!眮?lái)自阿肯色州的18歲的加內(nèi)什?奈爾表示:“你和AI聊天的時(shí)候,你永遠(yuǎn)都是對(duì)的,你永遠(yuǎn)都是有趣的,而且你的情緒永遠(yuǎn)都是合理的?!?/p>
奈爾說(shuō),曾幾何時(shí),他也沉迷于AI。但是今年秋天他就要步入大學(xué)校園了,現(xiàn)在他卻想減少對(duì)AI的使用。他說(shuō),他有一位高中好友,就連跟女朋友的深度聊天,靠的都是“AI軍師”的出謀劃策。而且最后結(jié)束兩年的戀情時(shí),也是讓AI代寫的分手短信。這件事讓奈爾覺得很不安。
“用電腦程序來(lái)終結(jié)一段真實(shí)的感情,這種感覺有點(diǎn)反烏托邦,好像我們?cè)谌斡呻娔X來(lái)取代人與人之間的關(guān)系。”
有多少青少年在使用AI?研究結(jié)果讓專家震驚
根據(jù) “常識(shí)媒體”的調(diào)查,有31%的青少年表示,在與AI朋友對(duì)話時(shí),他們感到“像和真人朋友聊天一樣滿意,或者比與真人聊天更令人滿意?!北M管有半數(shù)青少年表示,他們不信任AI給出的建議,但仍有33%的受訪青少年會(huì)選擇與AI談?wù)搰?yán)肅問題或重要問題,而非與真人朋友交流這些問題。
該研究的第一作者、“常識(shí)媒體”首席研究員邁克爾?羅布表示,以上發(fā)現(xiàn)讓人感到擔(dān)憂,也為家長(zhǎng)、老師和政策制定者們敲響了警鐘。目前AI行業(yè)正在蓬勃發(fā)展,但是很大程度上缺乏監(jiān)管。另一方面,AI正像智能手機(jī)和社交媒體一樣,正在與青少年的成長(zhǎng)過(guò)程深度融合。
羅布表示:“這確實(shí)令人震驚,在我們開展這項(xiàng)調(diào)查時(shí),我們根本想不到,會(huì)有這么多孩子使用AI陪伴工具?!睘榱诉M(jìn)行這項(xiàng)研究,他們于今年4月到5月選取全美范圍內(nèi)的1000多名青少年進(jìn)行了調(diào)查。
羅布表示,青春期是青少年培養(yǎng)自我認(rèn)同、社交技能和獨(dú)立性的關(guān)鍵時(shí)期,AI陪伴工具只能作為現(xiàn)實(shí)互動(dòng)的補(bǔ)充,而不能代替青少年在現(xiàn)實(shí)世界中的溝通和互動(dòng)。
“AI只會(huì)不斷地認(rèn)可你,而不會(huì)挑戰(zhàn)你,你從AI那里也學(xué)不會(huì)如何理解社交信號(hào),學(xué)不會(huì)如何理解別人的觀點(diǎn)。如果青少年跟著AI平臺(tái)學(xué)習(xí)社交技能,那他們就無(wú)法真實(shí)世界的互動(dòng)做好準(zhǔn)備。”羅布說(shuō)。
另外,該非營(yíng)利組織還對(duì)時(shí)下流行的幾個(gè)AI陪伴工具做了“風(fēng)險(xiǎn)評(píng)估”,結(jié)果發(fā)現(xiàn),這些平臺(tái)的年齡限制機(jī)制形同虛設(shè),而且能夠生成色情內(nèi)容,提供危險(xiǎn)建議和有害信息。該組織建議未成年人不要使用AI陪伴工具。
不光青少年,成年人也遭不住
有研究人員和教育界人士指出,青少年過(guò)于依賴AI,會(huì)對(duì)認(rèn)知發(fā)育產(chǎn)生負(fù)面影響,特別是會(huì)影響他們的創(chuàng)造力、批判性思維和社交技能。兒童過(guò)早依賴AI聊天機(jī)器人的危險(xiǎn)更是不容忽視。去年,美國(guó)佛羅里達(dá)州一名14歲男孩就因?qū)σ粋€(gè)AI聊天機(jī)器人產(chǎn)生情感依戀而自殺。正是這一慘痛事件,讓這一問題進(jìn)入了廣大美國(guó)民眾的視野。
北卡羅來(lái)納大學(xué)教堂山分校心理學(xué)與神經(jīng)科學(xué)教授伊娃?特爾澤指出:“現(xiàn)在,家長(zhǎng)們根本不知道正在發(fā)生這種事。我們所有人都對(duì)這一現(xiàn)象的爆發(fā)速度感到震驚?!碧貭枬烧陬I(lǐng)導(dǎo)多項(xiàng)關(guān)于青少年與AI的研究。這是一個(gè)全新的研究領(lǐng)域,現(xiàn)有數(shù)據(jù)也非常有限。
特爾澤的研究發(fā)現(xiàn),一些年僅8歲的兒童已經(jīng)開始使用生成式AI工具。而且一些青少年會(huì)使用AI探索性內(nèi)容和尋求陪伴。特爾澤還發(fā)現(xiàn),青少年頻繁使用的熱門應(yīng)用之一SpicyChat AI,是一款面向成人的免費(fèi)角色扮演APP。
許多青少年還表示,在一些敏感場(chǎng)合,他們讓AI來(lái)寫郵件或者短信,好確保自己使用了恰當(dāng)?shù)恼Z(yǔ)氣。
特爾澤表示:“這里值得擔(dān)憂的是,他們很可因此不再相信自己的決策能力,他們一遇事就要先找AI,否則就不能確定自己的想法是否是對(duì)的。”
來(lái)自阿肯色州的17歲少年布魯斯?佩里表示,他對(duì)這一點(diǎn)深有體會(huì),他現(xiàn)在寫作文甚至是寫大綱都要依賴AI工具。
“如果你讓我寫一篇作文,我會(huì)先想到去找ChatGPT,而不是拿起筆來(lái)就寫?!?佩里說(shuō)。他現(xiàn)在每天都會(huì)用到AI工具,不光會(huì)向AI尋求社交建議,就連今天穿什么衣服,或者給老師寫郵件這些事,他都要依賴AI,因?yàn)樗X得AI可以更快地把他的想法表達(dá)出來(lái)。
佩里說(shuō),他很慶幸自己小的時(shí)候沒有AI陪伴工具。
佩里說(shuō):“我擔(dān)心孩子們會(huì)迷失在AI里。我能想象,一個(gè)在AI陪伴下長(zhǎng)大的孩子,可能會(huì)覺得沒有必要去公園,也沒必要嘗試交朋友?!?/p>
其他受訪青少年也認(rèn)同這一觀點(diǎn),他們認(rèn)為,AI對(duì)兒童心理健康的影響,與社交媒體有本質(zhì)上的不同。
奈爾表示:“社交媒體滿足了人們被看見、被了解和認(rèn)識(shí)新朋友的需求。但AI滿足的是一種更深層次的需求——我們對(duì)情感依戀的需求,還有我們感受情感的需求。這就是為什么很多人如此依賴AI?!?/p>
最后,奈爾總結(jié)道:“這就是一種新型的上癮,這就是我的看法?!?/p>
美聯(lián)社對(duì)教育問題的報(bào)道獲得了多個(gè)私人基金會(huì)的資金支持。美聯(lián)社對(duì)所有報(bào)道內(nèi)容負(fù)全部責(zé)任。若想了解美聯(lián)社與相關(guān)慈善機(jī)構(gòu)合作的標(biāo)準(zhǔn)、資助者的名單以及受資助的報(bào)道領(lǐng)域,請(qǐng)?jiān)L問AP.org查詢。(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:樸成奎
隨著AI技術(shù)的飛速發(fā)展,青少年和專家們都擔(dān)心,AI有可能顛覆傳統(tǒng)的人際關(guān)系,加劇孤獨(dú)感,帶來(lái)更多青少年心理健康問題。
關(guān)鍵詞:AI助手;青少年;社交
凱拉?切奇是美國(guó)堪薩斯州的一個(gè)高中生。她現(xiàn)在“事無(wú)巨細(xì)都要問AI”。
凱拉·切奇是一個(gè)15歲的女孩?,F(xiàn)在不管是購(gòu)買返校用品,妝容的色彩選擇,買低卡零食,還是舉辦生日派對(duì),她都要向ChatGPT尋求建議。
當(dāng)然,作為一個(gè)高二學(xué)生,她還是有底線的,起碼不會(huì)讓AI幫自己做作業(yè),而且她問AI的也主要是一些日常問題。但是根據(jù)一項(xiàng)最新研究,以及從美聯(lián)社采訪的情況來(lái)看,廣大青少年紛紛表示,他們?cè)絹?lái)越把AI視為一個(gè)同伴,不僅能為他們提供建議,還能提供友誼和陪伴。
“現(xiàn)在所有人不管干什么都會(huì)用到AI,它正在占據(jù)主導(dǎo)地位。”切奇也很好奇,AI究竟會(huì)給她這一代人帶來(lái)怎樣的影響?!拔矣X得青少年使用AI,就是因?yàn)閼械盟伎?。?/p>
過(guò)去幾年,一談到青少年使用AI的問題,人們的關(guān)注點(diǎn)就會(huì)不由自禁地放在學(xué)業(yè)作弊的問題上。但是AI對(duì)青少年的影響遠(yuǎn)遠(yuǎn)不止于此。廣大青少年紛紛表示,AI已經(jīng)成為他們獲取個(gè)人建議、情感支持、日常決策和解決問題的首選渠道。
“AI一直在線,也永遠(yuǎn)不會(huì)嫌棄你”
研究和倡導(dǎo)合理使用電子產(chǎn)品和數(shù)字媒體的組織 “常識(shí)媒體”(Common Sense Media)開展的一項(xiàng)最新研究顯示,有超過(guò)70%的青少年使用過(guò)AI陪伴工具,半數(shù)青少年會(huì)定期使用AI陪伴工具。
此處的AI陪伴工具,指的是由AI來(lái)充當(dāng)“數(shù)字朋友” 的平臺(tái),比如Character.AI和Replika等。這種平臺(tái)可以根據(jù)你的要求,定制“數(shù)字朋友”的性格或一些特質(zhì),能夠給你帶來(lái)真人一般的對(duì)話體驗(yàn)和情感支持。但研究人員表示,就連ChatGPT和Claude這類主要用于回答問題的熱門AI網(wǎng)站,也被青少年當(dāng)成了他們的“數(shù)字朋友”。
隨著AI技術(shù)的飛速發(fā)展,青少年和專家們都擔(dān)心,AI有可能顛覆傳統(tǒng)的人際關(guān)系,加劇孤獨(dú)感,帶來(lái)更多青少年心理健康問題。
“AI一直都在線,它永遠(yuǎn)不會(huì)嫌棄你,也不會(huì)對(duì)你指手劃腳?!眮?lái)自阿肯色州的18歲的加內(nèi)什?奈爾表示:“你和AI聊天的時(shí)候,你永遠(yuǎn)都是對(duì)的,你永遠(yuǎn)都是有趣的,而且你的情緒永遠(yuǎn)都是合理的?!?/p>
奈爾說(shuō),曾幾何時(shí),他也沉迷于AI。但是今年秋天他就要步入大學(xué)校園了,現(xiàn)在他卻想減少對(duì)AI的使用。他說(shuō),他有一位高中好友,就連跟女朋友的深度聊天,靠的都是“AI軍師”的出謀劃策。而且最后結(jié)束兩年的戀情時(shí),也是讓AI代寫的分手短信。這件事讓奈爾覺得很不安。
“用電腦程序來(lái)終結(jié)一段真實(shí)的感情,這種感覺有點(diǎn)反烏托邦,好像我們?cè)谌斡呻娔X來(lái)取代人與人之間的關(guān)系?!?/p>
有多少青少年在使用AI?研究結(jié)果讓專家震驚
根據(jù) “常識(shí)媒體”的調(diào)查,有31%的青少年表示,在與AI朋友對(duì)話時(shí),他們感到“像和真人朋友聊天一樣滿意,或者比與真人聊天更令人滿意?!北M管有半數(shù)青少年表示,他們不信任AI給出的建議,但仍有33%的受訪青少年會(huì)選擇與AI談?wù)搰?yán)肅問題或重要問題,而非與真人朋友交流這些問題。
該研究的第一作者、“常識(shí)媒體”首席研究員邁克爾?羅布表示,以上發(fā)現(xiàn)讓人感到擔(dān)憂,也為家長(zhǎng)、老師和政策制定者們敲響了警鐘。目前AI行業(yè)正在蓬勃發(fā)展,但是很大程度上缺乏監(jiān)管。另一方面,AI正像智能手機(jī)和社交媒體一樣,正在與青少年的成長(zhǎng)過(guò)程深度融合。
羅布表示:“這確實(shí)令人震驚,在我們開展這項(xiàng)調(diào)查時(shí),我們根本想不到,會(huì)有這么多孩子使用AI陪伴工具?!睘榱诉M(jìn)行這項(xiàng)研究,他們于今年4月到5月選取全美范圍內(nèi)的1000多名青少年進(jìn)行了調(diào)查。
羅布表示,青春期是青少年培養(yǎng)自我認(rèn)同、社交技能和獨(dú)立性的關(guān)鍵時(shí)期,AI陪伴工具只能作為現(xiàn)實(shí)互動(dòng)的補(bǔ)充,而不能代替青少年在現(xiàn)實(shí)世界中的溝通和互動(dòng)。
“AI只會(huì)不斷地認(rèn)可你,而不會(huì)挑戰(zhàn)你,你從AI那里也學(xué)不會(huì)如何理解社交信號(hào),學(xué)不會(huì)如何理解別人的觀點(diǎn)。如果青少年跟著AI平臺(tái)學(xué)習(xí)社交技能,那他們就無(wú)法真實(shí)世界的互動(dòng)做好準(zhǔn)備?!绷_布說(shuō)。
另外,該非營(yíng)利組織還對(duì)時(shí)下流行的幾個(gè)AI陪伴工具做了“風(fēng)險(xiǎn)評(píng)估”,結(jié)果發(fā)現(xiàn),這些平臺(tái)的年齡限制機(jī)制形同虛設(shè),而且能夠生成色情內(nèi)容,提供危險(xiǎn)建議和有害信息。該組織建議未成年人不要使用AI陪伴工具。
不光青少年,成年人也遭不住
有研究人員和教育界人士指出,青少年過(guò)于依賴AI,會(huì)對(duì)認(rèn)知發(fā)育產(chǎn)生負(fù)面影響,特別是會(huì)影響他們的創(chuàng)造力、批判性思維和社交技能。兒童過(guò)早依賴AI聊天機(jī)器人的危險(xiǎn)更是不容忽視。去年,美國(guó)佛羅里達(dá)州一名14歲男孩就因?qū)σ粋€(gè)AI聊天機(jī)器人產(chǎn)生情感依戀而自殺。正是這一慘痛事件,讓這一問題進(jìn)入了廣大美國(guó)民眾的視野。
北卡羅來(lái)納大學(xué)教堂山分校心理學(xué)與神經(jīng)科學(xué)教授伊娃?特爾澤指出:“現(xiàn)在,家長(zhǎng)們根本不知道正在發(fā)生這種事。我們所有人都對(duì)這一現(xiàn)象的爆發(fā)速度感到震驚?!碧貭枬烧陬I(lǐng)導(dǎo)多項(xiàng)關(guān)于青少年與AI的研究。這是一個(gè)全新的研究領(lǐng)域,現(xiàn)有數(shù)據(jù)也非常有限。
特爾澤的研究發(fā)現(xiàn),一些年僅8歲的兒童已經(jīng)開始使用生成式AI工具。而且一些青少年會(huì)使用AI探索性內(nèi)容和尋求陪伴。特爾澤還發(fā)現(xiàn),青少年頻繁使用的熱門應(yīng)用之一SpicyChat AI,是一款面向成人的免費(fèi)角色扮演APP。
許多青少年還表示,在一些敏感場(chǎng)合,他們讓AI來(lái)寫郵件或者短信,好確保自己使用了恰當(dāng)?shù)恼Z(yǔ)氣。
特爾澤表示:“這里值得擔(dān)憂的是,他們很可因此不再相信自己的決策能力,他們一遇事就要先找AI,否則就不能確定自己的想法是否是對(duì)的?!?/p>
來(lái)自阿肯色州的17歲少年布魯斯?佩里表示,他對(duì)這一點(diǎn)深有體會(huì),他現(xiàn)在寫作文甚至是寫大綱都要依賴AI工具。
“如果你讓我寫一篇作文,我會(huì)先想到去找ChatGPT,而不是拿起筆來(lái)就寫?!?佩里說(shuō)。他現(xiàn)在每天都會(huì)用到AI工具,不光會(huì)向AI尋求社交建議,就連今天穿什么衣服,或者給老師寫郵件這些事,他都要依賴AI,因?yàn)樗X得AI可以更快地把他的想法表達(dá)出來(lái)。
佩里說(shuō),他很慶幸自己小的時(shí)候沒有AI陪伴工具。
佩里說(shuō):“我擔(dān)心孩子們會(huì)迷失在AI里。我能想象,一個(gè)在AI陪伴下長(zhǎng)大的孩子,可能會(huì)覺得沒有必要去公園,也沒必要嘗試交朋友?!?/p>
其他受訪青少年也認(rèn)同這一觀點(diǎn),他們認(rèn)為,AI對(duì)兒童心理健康的影響,與社交媒體有本質(zhì)上的不同。
奈爾表示:“社交媒體滿足了人們被看見、被了解和認(rèn)識(shí)新朋友的需求。但AI滿足的是一種更深層次的需求——我們對(duì)情感依戀的需求,還有我們感受情感的需求。這就是為什么很多人如此依賴AI。”
最后,奈爾總結(jié)道:“這就是一種新型的上癮,這就是我的看法?!?/p>
美聯(lián)社對(duì)教育問題的報(bào)道獲得了多個(gè)私人基金會(huì)的資金支持。美聯(lián)社對(duì)所有報(bào)道內(nèi)容負(fù)全部責(zé)任。若想了解美聯(lián)社與相關(guān)慈善機(jī)構(gòu)合作的標(biāo)準(zhǔn)、資助者的名單以及受資助的報(bào)道領(lǐng)域,請(qǐng)?jiān)L問AP.org查詢。(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:樸成奎
No question is too small when Kayla Chege, a high school student in Kansas, is using artificial intelligence.
The 15-year-old asks ChatGPT for guidance on back-to-school shopping, makeup colors, low-calorie choices at Smoothie King, plus ideas for her Sweet 16 and her younger sister’s birthday party.
The sophomore honors student makes a point not to have chatbots do her homework and tries to limit her interactions to mundane questions. But in interviews with The Associated Press and a new study, teenagers say they are increasingly interacting with AI as if it were a companion, capable of providing advice and friendship.
“Everyone uses AI for everything now. It’s really taking over,” said Chege, who wonders how AI tools will affect her generation. “I think kids use AI to get out of thinking.”
For the past couple of years, concerns about cheating at school have dominated the conversation around kids and AI. But artificial intelligence is playing a much larger role in many of their lives. AI, teens say, has become a go-to source for personal advice, emotional support, everyday decision-making and problem-solving.
‘AI is always available. It never gets bored with you’
More than 70% of teens have used AI companions and half use them regularly, according to a new study from Common Sense Media, a group that studies and advocates for using screens and digital media sensibly.
The study defines AI companions as platforms designed to serve as “digital friends,” like Character. AI or Replika, which can be customized with specific traits or personalities and can offer emotional support, companionship and conversations that can feel human-like. But popular sites like ChatGPT and Claude, which mainly answer questions, are being used in the same way, the researchers say.
As the technology rapidly gets more sophisticated, teenagers and experts worry about AI’s potential to redefine human relationships and exacerbate crises of loneliness and youth mental health.
“AI is always available. It never gets bored with you. It’s never judgmental,” says Ganesh Nair, an 18-year-old in Arkansas. “When you’re talking to AI, you are always right. You’re always interesting. You are always emotionally justified.”
All that used to be appealing, but as Nair heads to college this fall, he wants to step back from using AI. Nair got spooked after a high school friend who relied on an “AI companion” for heart-to-heart conversations with his girlfriend later had the chatbot write the breakup text ending his two-year relationship.
“That felt a little bit dystopian, that a computer generated the end to a real relationship,” said Nair. “It’s almost like we are allowing computers to replace our relationships with people.”
How many teens are using AI? New study stuns researchers
In the Common Sense Media survey, 31% of teens said their conversations with AI companions were “as satisfying or more satisfying” than talking with real friends. Even though half of teens said they distrust AI’s advice, 33% had discussed serious or important issues with AI instead of real people.
Those findings are worrisome, says Michael Robb, the study’s lead author and head researcher at Common Sense, and should send a warning to parents, teachers and policymakers. The now-booming and largely unregulated AI industry is becoming as integrated with adolescence as smartphones and social media are.
“It’s eye-opening,” said Robb. “When we set out to do this survey, we had no understanding of how many kids are actually using AI companions.” The study polled more than 1,000 teens nationwide in April and May.
Adolescence is a critical time for developing identity, social skills and independence, Robb said, and AI companions should complement — not replace — real-world interactions.
“If teens are developing social skills on AI platforms where they are constantly being validated, not being challenged, not learning to read social cues or understand somebody else’s perspective, they are not going to be adequately prepared in the real world,” he said.
The nonprofit analyzed several popular AI companions in a “ risk assessment,” finding ineffective age restrictions and that the platforms can produce sexual material, give dangerous advice and offer harmful content. The group recommends that minors not use AI companions.
A concerning trend to teens and adults alike
Researchers and educators worry about the cognitive costs for youth who rely heavily on AI, especially in their creativity, critical thinking and social skills. The potential dangers of children forming relationships with chatbots gained national attention last year when a 14-year-old Florida boy died by suicide after developing an emotional attachment to a Character. AI chatbot.
“Parents really have no idea this is happening,” said Eva Telzer, a psychology and neuroscience professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “All of us are struck by how quickly this blew up.” Telzer is leading multiple studies on youth and AI, a new research area with limited data.
Telzer’s research has found that children as young as 8 are using generative AI and also found that teens are using AI to explore their sexuality and for companionship. In focus groups, Telzer found that one of the top apps teens frequent is SpicyChat AI, a free role-playing app intended for adults.
Many teens also say they use chatbots to write emails or messages to strike the right tone in sensitive situations.
“One of the concerns that comes up is that they no longer have trust in themselves to make a decision,” said Telzer. “They need feedback from AI before feeling like they can check off the box that an idea is OK or not.”
Arkansas teen Bruce Perry, 17, says he relates to that and relies on AI tools to craft outlines and proofread essays for his English class.
“If you tell me to plan out an essay, I would think of going to ChatGPT before getting out a pencil,” Perry said. He uses AI daily and has asked chatbots for advice in social situations, to help him decide what to wear and to write emails to teachers, saying AI articulates his thoughts faster.
Perry says he feels fortunate that AI companions were not around when he was younger.
“I’m worried that kids could get lost in this,” Perry said. “I could see a kid that grows up with AI not seeing a reason to go to the park or try to make a friend.”
Other teens agree, saying the issues with AI and its effect on children’s mental health are different from those of social media.
“Social media complemented the need people have to be seen, to be known, to meet new people,” Nair said. “I think AI complements another need that runs a lot deeper — our need for attachment and our need to feel emotions. It feeds off of that.”
“It’s the new addiction,” Nair added. “That’s how I see it.”
The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.