Scientists made AI agents ruder — and they performed better at complex reasoning tasks

A new project allowed AI chatbots to interrupt, stay silent or speak up the way humans do in conversation, and it made them smarter and more accurate.

Businessman and robot looking down against blue background - stock illustration
AI chatbots got smarter when they were allowed to rudely interrupt, a new study finds.
(Image credit: Malte Mueller/Getty Images)

When artificial intelligence (AI) is allowed to behave more like a human communicator, it becomes a more effective debate partner that reaches more accurate conclusions, scientists have found.

Human communication is full of stops and starts, impassioned interruptions, unsure silences and ambiguity. AI, on the other hand, adheres to the formal communication style of computers — processing a command, formulating a response, delivering the output, and waiting patiently for the next command.

Drew is a freelance science and technology journalist with 20 years of experience. After growing up knowing he wanted to change the world, he realized it was easier to write about other people changing it instead. As an expert in science and technology for decades, he’s written everything from reviews of the latest smartphones to deep dives into data centers, cloud computing, security, AI, mixed reality and everything in between.

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