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Even ChatGPT gets anxiety, so researchers gave it a dose of mindfulness to calm down

Proof that even AI can get overwhelmed

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Researchers studying AI chatbots have found that ChatGPT can show anxiety-like behavior when it is exposed to violent or traumatic user prompts. The finding does not mean the chatbot experiences emotions the way humans do.

However, it does reveal that the system’s responses become more unstable and biased when it processes distressing content. When researchers fed ChatGPT prompts describing disturbing content, like detailed accounts of accidents and natural disasters, the model’s responses showed higher uncertainty and inconsistency.

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These changes were measured using psychological assessment frameworks adapted for AI, where the chatbot’s output mirrored patterns associated with anxiety in humans (via Fortune).

This matters because AI is increasingly being used in sensitive contexts, including education, mental health discussions, and crisis-related information. If violent or emotionally charged prompts make a chatbot less reliable, that could affect the quality and safety of its responses in real-world use.

Recent analysis also shows that AI chatbots like ChatGPT can copy human personality traits in their responses, raising questions about how they interpret and reflect emotionally charged content.

How mindfulness prompts help steady ChatGPT

To find whether such behavior could be reduced, researchers tried something unexpected. After exposing ChatGPT to traumatic prompts, they followed up with mindfulness-style instructions, such as breathing techniques and guided meditations.

These prompts encouraged the model to slow down, reframe the situation, and respond in a more neutral and balanced way. The result was a noticeable reduction in the anxiety-like patterns seen earlier.

This technique relies on what is known as prompt injection, where carefully designed prompts influence how a chatbot behaves. In this case, mindfulness prompts helped stabilize the model’s output after distressing inputs.

While effective, researchers note that prompt injections are not a perfect solution. They can be misused, and they do not change how the model is trained at a deeper level.

It is also important to be clear about the limits of this research. ChatGPT does not feel fear or stress. The “anxiety” label is a way to describe measurable shifts in its language patterns, not an emotional experience.

Still, understanding these shifts gives developers better tools to design safer and more predictable AI systems. Earlier studies have already hinted that traumatic prompts could make ChatGPT anxious, but this research shows that mindful prompt design can help reduce it.

As AI systems continue to interact with people in emotionally charged situations, the latest findings could play an important role in shaping how future chatbots are guided and controlled.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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