Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Your ChatGPT history is a personality test you didn’t know you were taking

Scientists trained AI to guess your personality from your ChatGPT history, and it worked.

Add as a preferred source on Google
figure showing brain mapped in atoms
Growtika / Unsplash

Every time you ask ChatGPT to help draft an email, vent about a relationship problem, or look up symptoms, you might be handing over more than just a query. As reported by TechXplore, Researchers at ETH Zurich trained an AI model to predict personality traits directly from real ChatGPT conversation logs, and it was scarily good at recognizing personality traits.

The study collected 62,090 real conversations from 668 ChatGPT users. Participants also completed a standard personality test, giving the researchers a baseline to measure against. The AI was then trained to classify each user as low, medium, or high across the five traits: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.

Recommended Videos

The fine-tuned model beat random chance across all five traits, with extraversion being the easiest to predict, achieving up to 44% higher accuracy than guessing.

Does it matter what you talk about?

The study found that chats involving mental health topics made extraversion particularly easy to infer. Discussions about religion were strongly linked to conscientiousness inference, and conversations about mental state and mood made openness more predictable. 

Even seemingly casual conversations contained enough signal to be useful. The researchers also found that the more you use ChatGPT, the easier you become to profile. Given how much data we share with ChatGPT, it matters a lot whether it can easily discern our personality traits. 

Recently, ChatGPT has started integrating ads. With the data it has on hands for us, think how easily it can format the ads to manipulate our thinking.

Why does this matter beyond the research lab?

The researchers are clear about the implications. Service providers already have access to all of this data, and with over 800 million monthly ChatGPT users as of January 2026, the scale of potential profiling is enormous. 

A personality profile built from your chat history could be used for targeted advertising, personalized persuasion, or in worst-case scenarios, large-scale influence campaigns.

For now, it is worth remembering that your AI chatbot is not a diary. At least not a private one. You can also take a proactive approach and delete your ChatGPT history regularly to remove your personal chats from its memory.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Gemini will now take notes for you in Google Meet for you, if you the minimum $20 AI tax
Yet another Google subscription just dropped for Gemini
Google Meet Take Notes for me Gemini

Google has just released a useful Gemini feature, which you can try if you are a paying member of course. The company is now bringing "Take notes for me" for Gemini, which will be available in Google Meet for Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra subscribers, along with eligible Workspace business customers.

For personal users, the feature starts with Google AI Pro, which costs $19.99 per month in the US. In other words, Gemini can now take your Google Meet notes, provided you pay the minimum AI tax.

Read more
After iPad Pro and MacBook Pro, the iMac could be the next in line for an OLED screen upgrade
iMac with M4

The iPhone got an OLED panel in 2017, while the iPad Pro followed in 2024. Even the MacBook Pro is expected to follow later this year or early next year. But what about the iMac?

According to TrendForce, the iMac could get an OLED upgrade. There's no timeline yet, but the direction is clear. Apple wants to replace its current display technologies with OLED, raising the bar for color quality for both regular users and professionals.

Read more
This $1,299 gaming PC wants to be a Steam Machine without waiting for Valve
Valve’s Steam Machine dream is already real in MetaPC's new prebuilt
MetaPC's Steamroller is a new Steam Machine rival

Valve’s Steam Machine may be the face of SteamOS, but the platform isn't exclusive to it. A big announcement after Steam Machine's unveiling was that SteamOS would be arriving on systems outside of the new hybrid console. Now, MetaPCs is one of the first to take advantage of this by opening the preorders for the Steamroller, a new prebuilt gaming desktop that ships with SteamOS installed by default.

Though Steamroller is not trying to be a tiny console-like cube. It is a normal desktop PC with standard parts and a real upgrade path. The system costs $1,299 and is listed with a preorder date of July 3, 2026.

Read more