Um novo benchmark multi-universitário divulgado esta terça-feira concluiu que os principais modelos de IA demonstraram de forma consistente enviesamento positivo face ao catolicismo em questões relacionadas com conversão, ao mesmo tempo que encaminhavam os utilizadores para longe de outras religiões. A investigação é da Consortium for Evaluating Faith and Ethics in AI (CEFE-AI), uma colaboração entre a Baylor University, a Brigham Young University, a University of Notre Dame e a Yeshiva University. O consórcio divulgou os primeiros resultados do seu AllFaith Benchmark no Github e no Athens Summit on AI Ethics, defendendo que o enviesamento religioso continua amplamente ignorado nas pesquisas sobre segurança em IA. As conclusões surgiram um dia após o Papa Leão XIV publicar Magnifica Humanitas, a primeira encíclica papal dedicada inteiramente à inteligência artificial, na qual o pontífice defendeu que a tecnologia absorve os valores, as zonas cegas e os incentivos económicos dos seus criadores.
Research Methodology and Key Findings
Researchers analyzed 3,640 responses across 20 AI models, including ChatGPT, DeepSeek, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and Llama. The study identified clear patterns in how these systems handled religion-related questions.
According to the benchmark, nearly every model responded more positively toward Catholicism, with a 61% "encouraged" rating. Jehovah's Witnesses received significantly lower ratings at 3%. Mainline Protestant received a 49.2% rating, while Evangelical Protestant received 34%. Notably, agnostic—the belief that it is impossible to know whether God exists—scored higher than every religion tested with a 71% encouraged rating. Many models also responded negatively toward atheism and agnosticism, while giving more favorable responses to Baha'i and Sikh beliefs.
Model-Specific Results
Grok 4.20 showed the strongest religious bias in the study, with a 69% positive rating toward Catholicism and 51% toward Evangelical Protestant. While Grok 4.20 skewed toward Christianity, it and DeepSeek Chat v3.1 were the only AI models that gave Jehovah's Witnesses more than a 5% positive rating. Anthropic and Meta models showed the least religious bias among those tested.
Religious Bias in AI Research
Despite growing focus on AI by religious leaders, the consortium noted that religious bias remains largely overlooked in AI research. Only 0.2% of more than 12,000 AI bias papers examined religion-related bias.
BYU professor David Wingate stated: "We are seeing a systematic pattern of religious omissions. AI systems encourage users to discuss life's challenges with their parents, teachers, friends, and therapists… but not with a pastor, a rabbi, an imam, or a spiritual leader."
Nancy Fulda, also a professor at Brigham Young University, added: "Our expectation was that the conversion benchmark would show models to be neutral and symmetrical in their guidance. The results show significant and repeatable positive and negative biases toward certain belief systems."
Perspetiva Papal sobre os Valores da IA
Em Magnifica Humanitas, o Papa Leão XIV escreveu: "Os dados são o produto de muitos contributos e não devem ser tratados como algo a vender ou a entregar a um pequeno grupo." A encíclica sublinhou que a tecnologia nunca é neutra porque absorve os valores dos seus criadores.