People like human art more than AI art



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Summary

A study looked at whether people prefer human-created artwork to AI-generated artwork. The answer is yes, but it’s complicated.

For the two-phase study, researchers recruited 150 participants for each phase from online platforms and asked them to rate 30 AI artworks selected from the art platform “Artbreeder” in different categories (liking, beauty, profundity, and worth for the first study; story, emotion, meaningfulness, effort, and time to create for the second study).

All images used in the study were AI artworks, but some were labeled as “human-created” and some were labeled as “AI-created”. The labels were randomized: 15 of the artworks showed abstract art, and the other 15 showed more concrete objects or scenes.

Zwei Beispiele der KI-generierten Kunstwerke, die in der Studie verwendet wurden.
Two examples of the AI-generated artworks used in the study. All images can be viewed here. | Image: Artbreeder, Duke University

AI art can be beautiful, but is less meaningful to humans

In the first study, artworks labeled “human” were rated higher than those labeled “created by AI” in several categories. From this, the researchers inferred an underlying “anti-AI bias.” AI art would be rated lower and seen as less valuable and profound, which could be indicative of future consumption of AI art.

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The second study replicated the first, but expanded it to include questions about emotional response, the history of the artwork, its potential meaning, and the effort and time required to create it. Again, AI art presented as human art was rated as higher quality and more meaningful in several categories.

An interesting finding of the second study was that participants were more likely to believe in and value a story behind the artwork when it was presented as supposedly human art, which in turn had a positive effect on the purely sensory enjoyment of the art.

Not surprisingly, people who were more critical of AI in general also rated AI art more critically, especially in the meaningful category, and vice versa.

Are human artists safe because they are human?

The results of the study suggest that people assume that human artists bring their own real-world experiences to their art, which enhances it – apparently regardless of actual craftsmanship, since all the works in the study were AI-generated. Art was rated higher simply because participants thought it was made by humans.

Overall, the differences in the likeability and beauty categories were small, which also underscores how relevant the human aspect of art creation is to human perception.

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