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Geopolitical biases in LLMs: what are the "good" and the "bad" countries according to contemporary language models

7 June 2025
Mikhail Salnikov
Dmitrii Korzh
Ivan Lazichny
Elvir Karimov
Artyom Iudin
Ivan Oseledets
Oleg Y. Rogov
Alexander Panchenko
Natalia Loukachevitch
Elena Tutubalina
ArXiv (abs)PDFHTML
Main:3 Pages
9 Figures
Bibliography:3 Pages
13 Tables
Appendix:9 Pages
Abstract

This paper evaluates geopolitical biases in LLMs with respect to various countries though an analysis of their interpretation of historical events with conflicting national perspectives (USA, UK, USSR, and China). We introduce a novel dataset with neutral event descriptions and contrasting viewpoints from different countries. Our findings show significant geopolitical biases, with models favoring specific national narratives. Additionally, simple debiasing prompts had a limited effect in reducing these biases. Experiments with manipulated participant labels reveal models' sensitivity to attribution, sometimes amplifying biases or recognizing inconsistencies, especially with swapped labels. This work highlights national narrative biases in LLMs, challenges the effectiveness of simple debiasing methods, and offers a framework and dataset for future geopolitical bias research.

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@article{salnikov2025_2506.06751,
  title={ Geopolitical biases in LLMs: what are the "good" and the "bad" countries according to contemporary language models },
  author={ Mikhail Salnikov and Dmitrii Korzh and Ivan Lazichny and Elvir Karimov and Artyom Iudin and Ivan Oseledets and Oleg Y. Rogov and Natalia Loukachevitch and Alexander Panchenko and Elena Tutubalina },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.06751},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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