A Tale of Two Identities: An Ethical Audit of AI-Crafted Synthetic Personas

Authors

  • Pranav Narayanan Venkit Salesforce AI Research Pennsylvania State University
  • Jiayi Li Pennsylvania State University
  • Yingfan Zhou Pennsylvania State University
  • Sarah Rajtmajer Pennsylvania State University
  • Shomir Wilson Pennsylvania State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i44.41112

Abstract

As LLMs (large language models) are increasingly used to generate synthetic personas, particularly in data-limited domains such as health, privacy, and HCI, it becomes necessary to understand how these narratives represent identity, especially that of minority communities. In this paper, we audit synthetic personas generated by 3 LLMs (GPT4o, Gemini 1.5 Pro, Deepseek v2.5) through the lens of representational harm, focusing specifically on racial identity. Using a mixed-methods approach combining close reading, lexical analysis, and a parameterized creativity framework, we compare 1,512 LLM-generated persona to human-authored responses. Our findings reveal that LLMs disproportionately foreground racial markers, overproduce culturally coded language, and construct personas that are syntactically elaborate yet narratively reductive. These patterns result in a range of sociotechnical harms, including stereotyping, exoticism, erasure, and benevolent bias, that are often obfuscated by superficially positive narrations. We formalize this phenomenon as algorithmic othering, where minoritized identities are rendered hypervisible but less authentic.

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Published

2026-03-14

How to Cite

Narayanan Venkit, P., Li, J., Zhou, Y., Rajtmajer, S., & Wilson, S. (2026). A Tale of Two Identities: An Ethical Audit of AI-Crafted Synthetic Personas. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 40(44), 37765–37774. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i44.41112

Issue

Section

AAAI Special Track on AI Alignment