What makes you say this: “However, our results suggest that students are broadly less concerned about the risks of AI than people in the United States and Europe”?
From most of the survey data collected from Chinese citizens so far (e.g., this survey, The Center for Long-Term Artificial Intelligence, thisIpsos survey, and a few other polls), they’re consistently reporting low concern on AI risks compared to Westerners. Sometimes this could be due to framing, but our survey explicitly translated many of these Western surveys’ questions so we could directly compare results. To be fair, we don’t have nearly as much data from China.
OK, so it’s not really just your results? You are aggregating across these studies (and presumably ones of “Westerners” as well)? I do wonder how directly comparable things are… Did you make an effort to translate a study or questions from studies, or are the questions just independently conceived and formulated?
What makes you say this: “However, our results suggest that students are broadly less concerned about the risks of AI than people in the United States and Europe”?
From most of the survey data collected from Chinese citizens so far (e.g., this survey, The Center for Long-Term Artificial Intelligence, this Ipsos survey, and a few other polls), they’re consistently reporting low concern on AI risks compared to Westerners. Sometimes this could be due to framing, but our survey explicitly translated many of these Western surveys’ questions so we could directly compare results. To be fair, we don’t have nearly as much data from China.
OK, so it’s not really just your results? You are aggregating across these studies (and presumably ones of “Westerners” as well)? I do wonder how directly comparable things are… Did you make an effort to translate a study or questions from studies, or are the questions just independently conceived and formulated?