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Seeing the Goal, Missing the Truth: Human Accountability for AI Bias

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  • Sean S. Cao
  • Wei Jiang
  • Hui Xu

Abstract

This research explores how human-defined goals influence the behavior of Large Language Models (LLMs) through purpose-conditioned cognition. Using financial prediction tasks, we show that revealing the downstream use (e.g., predicting stock returns or earnings) of LLM outputs leads the LLM to generate biased sentiment and competition measures, even though these measures are intended to be downstream task–independent. Goal-aware prompting shifts these intermediate measures toward the disclosed downstream objective, producing in-sample overfitting. Specifically, purpose leakage improves performance on data prior to the LLM’s knowledge cutoff, but provides no advantage after the cutoff. This bias is strong enough that regularization of prompt instructions cannot fully address this form of overfitting. We further show that the bias can arise from users’ unintentional conversational context that hints at the purpose. Overall, we document that AI bias due to “seeing the goal” is not an algorithmic flaw, but stems from human accountability in research design.

Suggested Citation

  • Sean S. Cao & Wei Jiang & Hui Xu, 2026. "Seeing the Goal, Missing the Truth: Human Accountability for AI Bias," NBER Working Papers 35142, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  • Handle: RePEc:nbr:nberwo:35142
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    JEL classification:

    • G14 - Financial Economics - - General Financial Markets - - - Information and Market Efficiency; Event Studies; Insider Trading
    • G17 - Financial Economics - - General Financial Markets - - - Financial Forecasting and Simulation

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