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Do You Think Your Prompt Politeness Affects LLMs?🤔


Have you ever wondered if your AI assistants—I mean, Large Language Models (LLMs) care about how you ask them for things? It appears that they might be more sensitive than you’d expect. A recent study explored how the politeness of your prompts influences these digital brains, and the results are both funny and insightful.


The basic idea is this LLMs seem to respond differently depending on whether you're being polite or impolite. The researchers tested LLMs across three languages—English, Chinese, and Japanese—using prompts that ranged from very polite to very rude.

The Politeness Spectrum from Sweet Talk to Rudeness

Imagine a scale where one end is like addressing royalty and the other is like shouting at a malfunctioning appliance. The study created prompts for each language with varying levels of politeness. Native speakers then ranked these prompts to make sure the politeness levels were accurate in the real world.


They Discovered

Rude Prompts = Worse Performance: Not surprisingly, when prompts were rude, LLMs often performed worse, making mistakes, showing biases, or even refusing to answer. It seems they don't appreciate being treated poorly.

Excessive Politeness Doesn't Help Either: Being overly polite doesn't guarantee better results. LLMs aren't necessarily swayed by flattery. There's a sweet spot that they prefer.

Culture Matters: The ideal level of politeness varies across languages. For example, Japanese, with its complex politeness system, requires a different approach than English. It was also found that models trained in a specific language are particularly sensitive to the politeness of that language.

Response Length Varies: The length of the response was also affected by politeness. In English, polite prompts tend to result in longer responses. However, if you become too impolite, the LLMs get chatty, which might be similar to how people react when they're upset. In Japanese, the LLMs get a bit chatty in medium levels of politeness, perhaps mirroring the fact that in Japanese, store staff are very polite with customers, even if the customer is not.


What does this mean for the average user?

It means that you need to be mindful of respect when interacting with LLMs. Whether you're asking for a summary, testing language understanding, or checking for biases, your tone matters.



Next time you're prompting an LLM, remember to be polite. You might get a better response. And who knows, maybe one day they'll be so polite that they'll offer you virtual tea and cookies😂. Or, they’ll just stay in their digital world, avoiding any world takeover scenarios😉.


In short, be nice to your AI, and they might be nice back.


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