Seeing the Reasoning: How LLM Rationales Influence User Trust and Decision-Making in Factual Verification Tasks
read the original abstract
Large Language Models (LLMs) increasingly show reasoning rationales alongside their answers, turning "reasoning" into a user-interface element. While step-by-step rationales are typically associated with model performance, how they influence users' trust and decision-making in factual verification tasks remains unclear. We ran an online study (N=68) manipulating three properties of LLM reasoning rationales: presentation format (instant vs. delayed vs. on-demand), correctness (correct vs. incorrect), and certainty framing (none vs. certain vs. uncertain). We found that correct rationales and certainty cues increased trust, decision confidence, and AI advice adoption, whereas uncertainty cues reduced them. Presentation format did not have a significant effect, suggesting users were less sensitive to how reasoning was revealed than to its reliability. Participants indicated they use rationales to primarily audit outputs and calibrate trust, where they expected rationales in stepwise, adaptive forms with certainty indicators. Our work shows that user-facing rationales, if poorly designed, can both support decision-making yet miscalibrate trust.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Multi-Turn Neural Transparency: Surfacing Neural Activations Improves User Calibration to LLM Behavioral Drift
Multi-turn neural transparency using behavioral vectors and dynamic visualizations improves user anticipation and evaluation of LLM trait expression while reducing overconfidence, per a randomized study with 246 participants.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.