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Paper

TESTING March 25, 2026

General Intellectual Humility Is Malleable Through AI-Mediated Reflective Dialogue

Authors

Mohammad Ratul Mahjabin, Raiyan Abdul Baten

Abstract

General intellectual humility (GIH) -- the recognition that one's beliefs may be fallible and revisable -- is associated with improved reasoning, learning, and social discourse, yet is widely regarded as a stable trait resistant to intervention. We test whether GIH can be elevated through a conversational intervention that combines staged cognitive scaffolding with personalized Socratic reflection. In a randomized controlled experiment (N=400), participants engaged in a structured, LLM-mediated dialogue that progressed from conceptual understanding of intellectual humility to applying, analyzing, evaluating, and generating novel, self-relevant scenarios that instantiate it. Relative to a time-matched control, the intervention produced a systematic increase in GIH, reduced rank-order stability, and tripled the rate of reliable individual improvement. Crucially, these effects persisted over a two-week follow-up without detectable decay. The effects generalized across political affiliation and did not depend on baseline personality profile. These findings challenge the prevailing pessimism regarding the malleability of GIH and suggest that scaffolded, Socratic reflection delivered through structured dialogue can produce durable changes in general intellectual humility.

Metadata

arXiv ID: 2603.23855
Provider: ARXIV
Primary Category: cs.HC
Published: 2026-03-25
Fetched: 2026-03-26 06:02

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Raw Data (Debug)
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