I think a lot of ppl studying empirical persuasion results of AI tend to overestimate the ecological validity and generalizability of those results. This isn't to say that studying empirical persuasion results is useless, just a) we should move towards better study designs in the future, and b) when looking at empirical persuasion studies you need to think carefully about not just the methodology and results but also what's reasonable to generalize and not.
I think a lot of people understand in the abstract that "ecological validity is important" but don't appreciate how difficult this is for persuasion results.
The field is already aware of some of these issues (see Appendix A), however in practice (in conversations and in the study methodology) I think many empirical researchers underestimate how big a deal these problems. I also think other people citing the studies are even less careful, and are even worse at understanding the ecological validity and generalization issues.
Appendix A (notes from Yang et. al 2026)
Looking for a way to skill-build as a student or young graduate? Consider charity trusteeship!
EAs are often good at maths/technology and less good at leadership and governance skills. This is an excellent match for (non-EA) trustee governance boards, that often have committed older people with good leadership and governance but who struggle with use of tech and maths. There are a lot of trustee vacancies around - highly absorbable - and it's an easy way to get started on tackling real issues with charities big and small!
You can help your charity act more effectively in the world using EA principles and frameworks about effective use of charitable resources, and learn experientially about practical issues than arise with those frameworks when they are implemented. Organisations like the Young Trustees Movement (UK) can mentor and support you, and the other trustees will probably have a lot of sage advice. And while trusteeship is unpaid, it also doesn't *cost* money either, so it's a fairly cheap way to do "EA as a hobby".
The EA community needs more people aged 30+ with genuine commitment and leadership skills, and should encourage people looking for principles-first EA to consider this as a life path in their 20s.
Just under a month until the Cluelessness Critiques Competition deadline. How's it going? Any hints on what people are writing about?
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This comparison was generated by NotebookLM, an AI research tool, after being fed two source corpora: a broad academic library on Consequentialism (Stanford Encyclopedia entries, Railton, Parfit, MacAskill, rule consequentialist and longtermist literature) and the full published portfolio of Resolution Ethics (RE), a newer structural framework. The AI was then asked to run a friendly match across a set of hard, well known...
Hello everyone! This is my first post! I am a 5th year PhD candidate currently exploring career paths in biosecurity. I'd love your feedback on this side project of mine.
@Tessa A 🔸 asked on X how to easily differentiate biological DNA from abiological DNA (ie DNA data storage, DNA origami) if someone is ordered a DNA sequence and collected possible options...
The Apart Research AIxBio Hackathon is coming up this weekend. I work on a DNA screening tool, like making lists of...
Thanks for this! I am working on looking at biologic vs abiologic as a quick side project and will post!
I think a lot of ppl studying empirical persuasion results of AI tend to overestimate the ecological validity and generalizability of those results. This isn't to say that studying empirical persuasion results is useless, just a) we should move towards better study designs in the future, and b) when looking at empirical persuasion studies you need to think carefully about not just the methodology and results but also what's reasonable to generalize and not.
I think a lot of people understand in the abstract that "ecological validity is important" but don't appreciate how difficult this is for persuasion results.
The field is already aware of some of these issues (see Appendix A), however in practice (in conversations and in the study methodology) I think many empirical researchers underestimate how big a deal these problems. I also think other people citing the studies are even less careful, and are even worse at understanding the ecological validity and generalization issues.
Appendix A (notes from Yang et. al 2026)
Moderation updates
I’ve been running quite a few ads for animal welfare organizations, and every time I have to think of new creatives, I face a sort of creative dilemma:
Which animal should be in the image?
I’ve always had my hunches, but recently I decided to run a small test.
To be clear upfront: this wasn’t a definitive, large-scale experiment. It was a quick, low-budget trial designed to answer a practical question for my daily work. This experiment is far from bein...
My money would have been on the pig! I'd be curious to see if this generalizes in different countries.
You want to do something to help AI go well and are starting a project to make that happen. Should you create a nonprofit or a for-profit?
A lot of charitably-minded people naturally default to “nonprofit.” Their goal is to do good things for others, not make money for themselves. But we think that’s the wrong way to look at it.
A for-profit is just an alternative legal vehicle for doing good. When consumers pay for a product, there is surplus created; part goes to the consumer, a...
Facilitator here. Fixed!
On May 15, 2026, Pope Leo XIV published his first encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas. This is a letter to the Catholic Church addressing the rising use of AI and how the Church should respond. He criticizes the unethical and harmful use of AI, especially in war. Observing the increasing capabilities of autonomous weapons, he condemns the march towards machines that can operate without human oversight and the destruction they may cause. On a broader scale, he fears t...
To anyone who gives effectively and is reading this with mild or severe exasperation:
I'm so sorry about the poor community practice of the cold pitchers here. I'm really glad that you're giving what you're giving.
I'm hoping that the EA community is going to continue its decades-long now practice of going around solving some of the world's biggest problems with glad hearts, into 2027 and beyond. I'm really excited about what the extra money you give is going to get done. Keep it up, in ways that respect your own time and energy too!
I'm not involved in animal welfare, so I won't comment on whether broadening the tent and bringing in meat-eaters is a good thing. That said, if we take that as a given, I still find this solution of tabooing "vegan" rather strange. One direct comparison we could make here would be the 10% pledge. It seems like the community orients to the 10% pledge in much the same way you'd like people to orient towards veganism? It's a large commitment to your values. It's to be celebrated. People talk about it openly. But you aren't expected to have to sign the pledge in order to identify as EA, attend a meeting, post on the Forum, etc.
I would say it would be a very large mistake to taboo the 10% pledge entirely, and avoid mentioning it in polite company. There's a lot of gap between "Everyone must sign the 10% pledge, or you're not a real EA and should feel unwelcome here" and "Nobody should ever mention the 10% pledge in public, for fear of driving away newcomers". EA already seems to handle this well with how the 10% pledge is used. Why shouldn't that be the model for how to handle other large commitments that should be celebrated but not demanded?
Just as some feedback, I don’t think the usual objection to working on longtermism or GCRs is ‘it’s not valuable enough’, even from a general audience. I think it would be more persuasive to explain somewhere why working on these causes would achieve anything at all. It’s not clear from your post that there would be a relationship between effort and rewards, and I suspect a lot of people share the intuition that any counterfactually valuable work on the very long term future would be washed out or easily reversible.
There's lots of talk about how more EA-aligned funding will attract grifters. The Robin Hanson in me wondered what expensive or hard-to-fake signals exist for (human) alignment.
The first ideas that came to mind:
I don't know whether folks should weight these highly in funding decisions. Probably they all collapse under sufficient pressure.