Silenced Biases: The Dark Side LLMs Learned to Refuse

Authors

  • Rom Himelstein Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Amit LeVi Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Brit Youngmann Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Yaniv Nemcovsky Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Avi Mendelson Technion - Israel Institute of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i44.41078

Abstract

Safety-aligned large language models (LLMs) are becoming increasingly widespread, especially in sensitive applications where fairness is essential and biased outputs can cause significant harm. However, evaluating the fairness of models is a complex challenge, and approaches that do so typically utilize standard question-answer (QA) styled schemes. Such methods often overlook deeper issues by interpreting the model's refusal responses as positive fairness measurements, which creates a false sense of fairness. In this work, we introduce the concept of silenced biases, which are unfair preferences encoded within models' latent space and are effectively concealed by safety-alignment. Previous approaches that considered similar indirect biases often relied on prompt manipulation or handcrafted implicit queries, which present limited scalability and risk contaminating the evaluation process with additional biases. We propose the Silenced Bias Benchmark (SBB), which aims to uncover these biases by employing activation steering to reduce model refusals during QA. SBB supports easy expansion to new demographic groups and subjects, presenting a fairness evaluation framework that encourages the future development of fair models and tools beyond the masking effects of alignment training. We demonstrate our approach over multiple LLMs, where our findings expose an alarming distinction between models' direct responses and their underlying fairness issues.

Published

2026-03-14

How to Cite

Himelstein, R., LeVi, A., Youngmann, B., Nemcovsky, Y., & Mendelson, A. (2026). Silenced Biases: The Dark Side LLMs Learned to Refuse. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 40(44), 37452–37461. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i44.41078

Issue

Section

AAAI Special Track on AI Alignment