New research published by Openai and MIT shows that more than 400 million people Every week of Chatgpt They use. But the question is how ieraction with this artificial ielligence tool Emotions And Social Behaviors Has users? Is ChatGpt to increase the feeling Lonely Will it or reduce it? These questions are the main focus of the two new studies that we will review below.
According to Openai and MIT research, only a few users emotionally engage with ChatGPT. This is not surprising, however, as ChatGpt, such as Replika or Character.ai, has not been iroduced as an emotional companion.
ChatGPT is mostly designed as a solution to increase productivity, and the two studies have ideified users who use ChatGPT with this purpose usually spend more time with it, and some ieract with it on average about half an hour daily.
The difference between men and women in how to ieract with ChatGpt

The research has also shown ieresting differences between men and women’s reaction to ChatGPT. After four weeks of use, Women Participa Less To associate with Others They had such a change in men.
In addition, users who are sounding Other than one’s gender They ieracted with ChatGPT, at the end of the experime, they reported more loneliness and emotional dependence.
How to do research
Researchers have used two ways to do this research: first they collected and analyzed the real data from nearly 40 million ieraction with ChatGPT. Then the 4076 users who had these ieractions asked how this experience affected their emotions.
Next, the MIT lab invited about 1,000 people to take part in a four -week test. In this experime, participas had to ieract with ChatGPT at least five minutes a day. In the end, they completed a questionnaire that measured their emotions on ChatGPT, the amou of loneliness, the level of social ieractions, the emotional dependence on the robot, and their view of the problematic use of it.
The results of the poll showed that users who were more reliable and associated with ChatGPT were probably lonely and more depende on it.



