Most respondents to a survey from 黑料不打烊's Imagining the Digital Future Center say they expect significant change by 2035.
Many global tech experts are concerned that our adoption of AI systems over the next decade will negatively alter our sense of purpose and affect how we think, feel, act and relate to one another. Some hope for a positive influence on humans鈥
curiosity, decision-making and creativity
A majority of global technology experts say the likely magnitude of change in humans鈥 native capacities and behaviors as they adapt to artificial intelligence (AI) will be 鈥渄eep and meaningful,鈥 or even 鈥渄ramatic鈥 over the next decade, according to a new report by 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Imagining the Digital Future Center (ITDF).
More than 300 experts responded to questions about the impact of change they expect on 12 essential human traits and capabilities by 2035. They predicted that change brought about by the adoption of AI is likely to be mostly negative in the following nine areas:
- Social and emotional intelligence
- Capacity and willingness to think deeply about complex concepts
- Trust in widely shared norms and values
- Confidence in their native abilities
- Empathy and application of moral judgment
- Mental well-being
- Sense of agency
- Sense of identity and purpose
- Metacognition
Pluralities said they expect that change for humans in by 2035 will be mostly positive in these areas:
- Curiosity and capacity to learn
- Decision-making and problem-solving
- Innovative thinking and creativity

Overall, 61% of these experts said they expect the change related to the evolution of humans and AI systems will be either 鈥渄eep and meaningful鈥 or 鈥渇undamental and revolutionary.鈥 Some 31% said the change would be 鈥渕oderate and noticeable鈥 and 8% thought the change would be 鈥渂arely perceptible鈥 or 鈥渋nconsequential.鈥
Respondents were also asked about the overall impact of AI on the essence of being human in the next decade. Some 50% said there will be changes for the better and the worse in fairly equal measures, while 23% the changes would be mostly for the worse and 16% thought it would be mostly for the better. Just 6% thought there would be little or no change overall.
These predictions came in non-scientific canvassing (based on a non-random sample) conducted between Dec. 27, 2024, and Feb. 1, 2025. Details about the methodology and sample can be found here:
鈥淭his report is a revealing and provocative declaration of the profound depth of change people are undergoing 鈥 often without really noticing at all 鈥 as we adapt to deeper uses of advancing AI technologies,鈥 said Janna Anderson, co-founder and senior researcher at ITDF. 鈥淐ollectively, these experts are calling on humanity to think intentionally and carefully, taking wise actions now, so we do not sleepwalk into an AI future that we never intended and do not want.鈥
Nearly 200 of these experts wrote full-length essays on the primary topic: Being Human in the Age of AI. An overwhelming majority of them focused their remarks on the potential problems they foresee. While they said the use of AI will be a boon to society in many important 鈥 and even vital 鈥 regards, most are worried about what they consider to be the fragile future of some foundational and unique traits. At the same time, a plurality of these experts鈥 essays express glimmers of hope that ever-adaptable humans will find ways to prevail and even flourish.
鈥淭he compelling concern many of these experts raise from a variety of vantage points is tied to how AI advances might affect people鈥檚 capacity and willingness to press forward on the essential traits of being human,鈥 said Lee Rainie, director the Imagining the Digital Future Center. 鈥淭hey anticipate that AI systems will keep encroaching on and surpassing some fundamental human intelligences and they worry this will be demoralizing and debilitating for us. At the same time, many of them have quite brilliant ideas about how this co-evolution of humans and machines can be harnessed for good. They think allied and adjacent intelligences can mesh if we find ways right now to reimagine our special capacities and our role in the world.鈥
A sample of compelling ideas from the essays in 鈥淭he Future of Being Human鈥
- The first multi-trillion-dollar corporation will employ no humans聽except legally-required executives and board, have no offices, own no property and operate entirely through AI and automated systems. 鈥撀燩aul Saffo
- 聽鈥淎I advisors and companions will increasingly vie for people鈥榮 time, attention and allegiance. 鈥 Affinity blocs will form among AI devotees and among AI conscientious objectors.鈥 鈥撀燛ric Saund
- 鈥淚ndividuals will face a stark choice between remaining 鈥榗lassic humans,鈥櫬爓ho rely on innate biological faculties, or embracing technological augmentation to enhance or replace certain abilities. This may involve surrendering some human traits to machines 鈥 raising ethical and existential questions about what it means to be human.鈥 鈥撀燚avid Vivancos
- 鈥淧roof of humanity鈥 will be required:聽鈥淲e may find it hard to distinguish between artificial personalities and real ones. That may result in a search for reliable proof of humanity so that we and bots can tell the difference.鈥 鈥撀燰int Cerf
- AI-powered autonomous weapons platforms will vastly outnumber human fighters聽on battlefields. War will be more violent and lethal and 鈥渃ivilian deaths will vastly outnumber combatant deaths.鈥 In addition, 鈥渁 single madman or angry and alienated teen might bring down civilization with their science project.鈥 鈥撀燩aul Saffo
- AI could redefine the meaning of authenticity in art.聽鈥淎I will be both the marble and the chisel, the brush and the canvas, the camera and the frame鈥 co-creating the 鈥榥eosynthetic.鈥欌 鈥撀燩eter Lunenfeld
- Things will be smarter than we are:聽鈥淚nstead of devising 鈥榟uman-in-the-loop鈥 policies to prevent AI from running amok, we will devise 鈥楢I-in-the-loop鈥 policies to help very fallible humans learn, think and create more effectively and more safely.鈥 鈥撀燬tephen Downes
- 鈥淪elf-inflicted AI dementia鈥澛爓ill arise out of the atrophy of human cognitive abilities due to over-reliance on AI systems. 鈥撀燢en Grady
- 鈥淥utsourced empathy via 鈥榓gent-based altruism:聽AI will automate most people鈥檚 acts of kindness, emotional support, caregiving and charity fundraising.鈥 鈥撀燭racey Follows
- 鈥淧robability matrices鈥 will replace traditional decision-making聽as AI-calculated probabilities of success will inform every life choice. 鈥淎nd one factor of the social, political and economic landscape of 2035 will be the decline of literacy due to agented AI shepherding.鈥 鈥撀燘arry Chudakov
- Most AIs will be 鈥淢ediocrity Engines鈥澛爐hat standardize information when you seek knowledge in a way that lacks details, spark and wit and deadens creativity; some inspiring AIs will partner with creative people. 鈥撀燗lf Rehn
- Social bots will be 鈥榯raining wheels鈥 for our social fitness.聽Bots could keep our interpersonal skills sharp: 鈥淚f we cannot live without bots, can they be turned into 鈥榯raining wheels鈥 or the equivalent of treadmills at the gym, improving our social interaction fitness?鈥 鈥撀燞enning Schulzrinne
- A new human 鈥淓nlightenment鈥 could begin due to digital twins and other AI agents聽doing up to six hours of digital chores every day and allowing humans to 鈥渟hift this energy to spiritual, emotional and experiential aspects of life.鈥 鈥撀燫abia Yasmeen
- Affording humans a universe-wide perspective on nearly everything:聽鈥淭his will be a dawn of a new Enlightenment that expands our perspectives beyond the individual and the species to a worldwide and perhaps universe-wide perspective.鈥 鈥撀燫ay Schroeder
- Will this seem tongue-in-cheek by 2035, or could it really come to fruition in the next decade?聽鈥淭he best-selling book of 2035 will be 鈥榃hat Was Human鈥 and it will be written by an AI. Purchases by other AIs will vastly outnumber purchases by human readers. This is because by 2035, humans have become so accustomed to AIs reading books for them and then reporting out a summary that most humans can no longer read on their own.聽But the real surprise聽is that the book is the first in a series written exclusively for an audience of AIs eager to finally understand the puzzle of what it means to be human.鈥 鈥撀燩aul Saffo