Subjective-probability forecasts of existential risk: Initial results from a hybrid persuasion-forecasting tournament
Ezra Karger,
Josh Rosenberg,
Zachary Jacobs,
Molly Hickman and
Phillip E. Tetlock
International Journal of Forecasting, 2025, vol. 41, issue 2, 499-516
Abstract:
A multi-stage persuasion-forecasting tournament asked specialists and generalists (“superforecasters”) to explain their probability judgments of short- and long-run existential threats to humanity. Specialists were more pessimistic, especially on long-run threats posed by artificial intelligence (AI). Despite incentives to share their best arguments during four months of discussion, neither side materially moved the other’s views. This would be puzzling if participants were Bayesian agents methodically sifting through elusive clues about distant futures but it is less puzzling if participants were boundedly rational agents searching for confirmatory evidence as the risks of embarrassing accuracy feedback receded. Consistent with the latter mechanism, strong AI-risk proponents made particularly extreme long- but not short-range forecasts and over-estimated the long-range AI-risk forecasts of others. We stress the potential of these methods to inform high-stakes debates, but we acknowledge limits on what even skilled forecasters can achieve in anticipating rare or unprecedented events.
Keywords: Existential risk; Global catastrophic risk; Long-run forecasting; Intersubjective metrics; Forecasting tournaments (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:intfor:v:41:y:2025:i:2:p:499-516
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijforecast.2024.11.008
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