News | National
22 Apr 2025 5:36
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Getting AIs working toward human goals - study shows how to measure misalignment

    Aligning AIs with people’s goals and values is tricky. A new technique quantifies how far off human and machine are from each other.

    Aidan Kierans, Ph.D. Student in Computer Science and Engineering, University of Connecticut
    The Conversation


    Ideally, artificial intelligence agents aim to help humans, but what does that mean when humans want conflicting things? My colleagues and I have come up with a way to measure the alignment of the goals of a group of humans and AI agents.

    The alignment problem – making sure that AI systems act according to human values – has become more urgent as AI capabilities grow exponentially. But aligning AI to humanity seems impossible in the real world because everyone has their own priorities. For example, a pedestrian might want a self-driving car to slam on the brakes if an accident seems likely, but a passenger in the car might prefer to swerve.

    By looking at examples like this, we developed a score for misalignment based on three key factors: the humans and AI agents involved, their specific goals for different issues, and how important each issue is to them. Our model of misalignment is based on a simple insight: A group of humans and AI agents are most aligned when the group’s goals are most compatible.

    In simulations, we found that misalignment peaks when goals are evenly distributed among agents. This makes sense – if everyone wants something different, conflict is highest. When most agents share the same goal, misalignment drops.

    Why it matters

    Most AI safety research treats alignment as an all-or-nothing property. Our framework shows it’s more complex. The same AI can be aligned with humans in one context but misaligned in another.

    This matters because it helps AI developers be more precise about what they mean by aligned AI. Instead of vague goals, such as align with human values, researchers and developers can talk about specific contexts and roles for AI more clearly. For example, an AI recommender system – those “you might like” product suggestions – that entices someone to make an unnecessary purchase could be aligned with the retailer’s goal of increasing sales but misaligned with the customer’s goal of living within his means.

    Recommender systems use sophisticated AI technologies to influence consumers, making it all the more important that they aren’t out of alignment with human values.

    For policymakers, evaluation frameworks like ours offer a way to measure misalignment in systems that are in use and create standards for alignment. For AI developers and safety teams, it provides a framework to balance competing stakeholder interests.

    For everyone, having a clear understanding of the problem makes people better able to help solve it.

    What other research is happening

    To measure alignment, our research assumes we can compare what humans want with what AI wants. Human value data can be collected through surveys, and the field of social choice offers useful tools to interpret it for AI alignment. Unfortunately, learning the goals of AI agents is much harder.

    Today’s smartest AI systems are large language models, and their black box nature makes it hard to learn the goals of the AI agents such as ChatGPT that they power. Interpretability research might help by revealing the models’ inner “thoughts”, or researchers could design AI that thinks transparently to begin with. But for now, it’s impossible to know whether an AI system is truly aligned.

    What’s next

    For now, we recognize that sometimes goals and preferences don’t fully reflect what humans want. To address trickier scenarios, we are working on approaches for aligning AI to moral philosophy experts.

    Moving forward, we hope that developers will implement practical tools to measure and improve alignment across diverse human populations.

    The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

    The Conversation

    Aidan Kierans has participated as an independent contractor in the OpenAI Red Teaming Network. His research described in this article was supported in part by the NSF Program on Fairness in AI in collaboration with Amazon. Any opinion, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation or Amazon. Kierans has also received research funding from the Future of Life Institute.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     22 Apr: Christchurch Police have concerns for the welfare of a woman who's been missing since Wednesday last week
     21 Apr: More than 800 properties have no electricity after a car drove into a power pole in the Tauranga suburb of Bellevue
     21 Apr: A 13-year-old girl has been reported missing in Waikato this evening
     21 Apr: Two fatalities today have brought the Easter Weekend road death toll to 4
     21 Apr: An Auckland woman's reported a suspicious visitor claiming to be conducting a storm damage survey
     21 Apr: A person has died in a serious crash involving two cars on State Highway 3 in Taranaki, near Urenui
     21 Apr: Chicken exports are returning to normal after a bird flu outbreak in Otago last year
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The Super Rugby Pacific ladder continues to show the much discussed progression of the Australian sides after 10 weeks of competition in 2025 More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Pope Francis dies aged 88 after overseeing one of the Catholic Church's most tumultuous periods More...



     Today's News

    Law and Order:
    Christchurch Police have concerns for the welfare of a woman who's been missing since Wednesday last week 4:37

    Law and Order:
    Pope Francis, head of the Catholic Church who made history as a liberal reformer, dies aged 88 23:17

    Accident and Emergency:
    More than 800 properties have no electricity after a car drove into a power pole in the Tauranga suburb of Bellevue 21:57

    International:
    From Jorge Mario Bergoglio to Pope Francis — a life in pictures 21:47

    Law and Order:
    A 13-year-old girl has been reported missing in Waikato this evening  21:17

    Business:
    Pope Francis dies aged 88 after overseeing one of the Catholic Church's most tumultuous periods 20:27

    Accident and Emergency:
    Two fatalities today have brought the Easter Weekend road death toll to 4 19:37

    Rugby League:
    Paramatta coach Jason Ryles has declared their intentions to sign Tigers discard Lachlan Galvin as the two teams get set to meet in league's NRL 18:57

    Rugby:
    The Super Rugby Pacific ladder continues to show the much discussed progression of the Australian sides after 10 weeks of competition in 2025 18:37

    Living & Travel:
    An Auckland woman's reported a suspicious visitor claiming to be conducting a storm damage survey 18:07


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd