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Reduced AI Acceptance After the Generative AI Boom: Evidence From a Two-Wave Survey Study

Published: October 27, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.23578v1

By: Joachim Baumann , Aleksandra Urman , Ulrich Leicht-Deobald and more

Potential Business Impact:

People trust humans more than AI now.

Business Areas:
Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Science and Engineering, Software

The rapid adoption of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) technologies has led many organizations to integrate AI into their products and services, often without considering user preferences. Yet, public attitudes toward AI use, especially in impactful decision-making scenarios, are underexplored. Using a large-scale two-wave survey study (n_wave1=1514, n_wave2=1488) representative of the Swiss population, we examine shifts in public attitudes toward AI before and after the launch of ChatGPT. We find that the GenAI boom is significantly associated with reduced public acceptance of AI (see Figure 1) and increased demand for human oversight in various decision-making contexts. The proportion of respondents finding AI "not acceptable at all" increased from 23% to 30%, while support for human-only decision-making rose from 18% to 26%. These shifts have amplified existing social inequalities in terms of widened educational, linguistic, and gender gaps post-boom. Our findings challenge industry assumptions about public readiness for AI deployment and highlight the critical importance of aligning technological development with evolving public preferences.

Country of Origin
🇮🇹 🇨🇭 🇮🇪 Ireland, Italy, Switzerland

Page Count
36 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Artificial Intelligence