The Illusion of Empathy: How AI Chatbots Shape Conversation Perception

Authors

  • Tingting Liu National Institute on Drug Abuse
  • Salvatore Giorgi National Institute on Drug Abuse
  • Ankit Aich National Institute on Drug Abuse, University of Pennsylvania
  • Allison Lahnala National Institute on Drug Abuse
  • Brenda Curtis National Institute on Drug Abuse
  • Lyle Ungar University of Pennsylvania
  • João Sedoc New York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33569

Abstract

As AI chatbots increasingly incorporate empathy, understanding user-centered perceptions of chatbot empathy and its impact on conversation quality remains essential yet under-explored. This study examines how chatbot identity and perceived empathy influence users' overall conversation experience. Analyzing 155 conversations from two datasets, we found that while GPT-based chatbots were rated significantly higher in conversational quality, they were consistently perceived as less empathetic than human conversational partners. Empathy ratings from GPT-4o annotations aligned with user ratings, reinforcing the perception of lower empathy in chatbots compared to humans. Our findings underscore the critical role of perceived empathy in shaping conversation quality, revealing that achieving high-quality human-AI interactions requires more than simply embedding empathetic language; it necessitates addressing the nuanced ways users interpret and experience empathy in conversations with chatbots.

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Published

2025-04-11

How to Cite

Liu, T., Giorgi, S., Aich, A., Lahnala, A., Curtis, B., Ungar, L., & Sedoc, J. (2025). The Illusion of Empathy: How AI Chatbots Shape Conversation Perception. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 39(13), 14327–14335. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33569

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Humans and AI