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Understanding the Mechanism of Altruism in Large Language Models

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  • Shuhuai Zhang
  • Shu Wang
  • Zijun Yao
  • Chuanhao Li
  • Xiaozhi Wang
  • Songfa Zhong
  • Tracy Xiao Liu

Abstract

Altruism is fundamental to human societies, fostering cooperation and social cohesion. Recent studies suggest that large language models (LLMs) can display human-like prosocial behavior, but the internal computations that produce such behavior remain poorly understood. We investigate the mechanisms underlying LLM altruism using sparse autoencoders (SAEs). In a standard Dictator Game, minimal-pair prompts that differ only in social stance (generous versus selfish) induce large, economically meaningful shifts in allocations. Leveraging this contrast, we identify a set of SAE features (0.024% of all features across the model's layers) whose activations are strongly associated with the behavioral shift. To interpret these features, we use benchmark tasks motivated by dual-process theories to classify a subset as primarily heuristic (System 1) or primarily deliberative (System 2). Causal interventions validate their functional role: activation patching and continuous steering of this feature direction reliably shift allocation distributions, with System 2 features exerting a more proximal influence on the model's final output than System 1 features. The same steering direction generalizes across multiple social-preference games. Together, these results enhance our understanding of artificial cognition by translating altruistic behaviors into identifiable network states and provide a framework for aligning LLM behavior with human values, thereby informing more transparent and value-aligned deployment.

Suggested Citation

  • Shuhuai Zhang & Shu Wang & Zijun Yao & Chuanhao Li & Xiaozhi Wang & Songfa Zhong & Tracy Xiao Liu, 2026. "Understanding the Mechanism of Altruism in Large Language Models," Papers 2604.19260, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2604.19260
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.19260
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