English

Argumentative Experience: Reducing Confirmation Bias on Controversial Issues through LLM-Generated Multi-Persona Debates

Human-Computer Interaction 2025-09-17 v5 Computers and Society Information Retrieval

Abstract

Multi-persona debate systems powered by large language models (LLMs) show promise in reducing confirmation bias, which can fuel echo chambers and social polarization. However, empirical evidence remains limited on whether they meaningfully shift user attention toward belief-challenging content, promote belief change, or outperform traditional debiasing strategies. To investigate this, we compare an LLM-based multi-persona debate system with a two-stance retrieval-based system, exposing participants to multiple viewpoints on controversial topics. By collecting eye-tracking data, belief change measures, and qualitative feedback, our results show that while the debate system does not significantly increase attention to opposing views, or make participants shift away from prior beliefs, it does provide a buffering effect against bias caused by individual cognitive tendency. These findings shed light on both the promise and limits of multi-persona debate systems in information seeking, and we offer design insights to guide future work toward more balanced and reflective information engagement.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2412.04629,
  title  = {Argumentative Experience: Reducing Confirmation Bias on Controversial Issues through LLM-Generated Multi-Persona Debates},
  author = {Li Shi and Houjiang Liu and Yian Wong and Utkarsh Mujumdar and Dan Zhang and Jacek Gwizdka and Matthew Lease},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2412.04629},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

Complete reanalysis using a revised methodology; results, figures, and discussion updated to reflect the new approach

R2 v1 2026-06-28T20:24:56.357Z