The Impact of Advanced AI Systems on Democracy

Author(s): 

Christopher Summerfield, Lisa P. Argyle, Michiel Bakker, Teddy Collins, Esin Durmus, Tyna Eloundou, Iason Gabriel, Deep Ganguli, Kobi Hackenburg, Gillian K. Hadfield, Luke Hewitt, Saffron Huang, Hélène Landemore, Nahema Marchal, Aviv Ovadya, Ariel Procaccia, Mathias Risse, Bruce Schneier, Elizabeth Seger, Divya Siddarth, Henrik Skaug Saetra, Michael Henry Tessler, and Matthew Botvinick

ISPS ID: 
isps25-61
Full citation: 
Summerfield, C., Argyle, L.P., Bakker, M. et al. The impact of advanced AI systems on democracy. Nat Hum Behav (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-025-02309-z
Abstract: 
Advanced artificial intelligence (AI) systems capable of generating humanlike text and multimodal content are now widely available. Here we ask what impact this will have on the democratic process. We consider the consequences of AI for citizens’ ability to make educated and competent choices about political representatives and issues (epistemic impacts). We explore how AI might be used to destabilize or support the mechanisms, including elections, by which democracy is implemented (material impacts). Finally, we discuss whether AI will strengthen or weaken the principles on which democracy is based (foundational impacts). The arrival of new AI systems clearly poses substantial challenges for democracy. However, we argue that AI systems also offer new opportunities to educate and learn from citizens, strengthen public discourse, help people to find common ground, and reimagine how democracies might work better.
Supplemental information: 
Publication date: 
2025
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