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      Better Slow than Sorry: Introducing Positive Friction for Reliable Dialogue Systems

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          Abstract

          While theories of discourse and cognitive science have long recognized the value of unhurried pacing, recent dialogue research tends to minimize friction in conversational systems. Yet, frictionless dialogue risks fostering uncritical reliance on AI outputs, which can obscure implicit assumptions and lead to unintended consequences. To meet this challenge, we propose integrating positive friction into conversational AI, which promotes user reflection on goals, critical thinking on system response, and subsequent re-conditioning of AI systems. We hypothesize systems can improve goal alignment, modeling of user mental states, and task success by deliberately slowing down conversations in strategic moments to ask questions, reveal assumptions, or pause. We present an ontology of positive friction and collect expert human annotations on multi-domain and embodied goal-oriented corpora. Experiments on these corpora, along with simulated interactions using state-of-the-art systems, suggest incorporating friction not only fosters accountable decision-making, but also enhances machine understanding of user beliefs and goals, and increases task success rates.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          28 January 2025
          Article
          2501.17348
          824259bc-a4b8-430d-a49f-3784de217355

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          Custom metadata
          cs.CL cs.HC

          Theoretical computer science,Human-computer-interaction
          Theoretical computer science, Human-computer-interaction

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