Widespread Gender and Pronoun Bias in Moral Judgments across LLMs

Gustavo Lucius Fernandes, Jeiverson Santos, Pedro O.S Vaz-de-Melo


Abstract
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used to assess moral or ethical statements, yet their judgments may reflect social and linguistic biases. This work presents a controlled, sentence-level study of how grammatical person, number, and gender markers influence LLM moral classifications of fairness. Starting from 550 balanced base sentences from the ETHICS dataset, we generated 26 counterfactual variants per item, systematically varying pronouns and demographic markers to yield 14,850 semantically equivalent sentences. We evaluated six model families (Grok, GPT, LLaMA, Gemma, DeepSeek, and Mistral), and measured fairness judgments and inter-group disparities using Statistical Parity Difference (SPD). Results show statistically significant biases: sentences written in the singular form and third person are more often judged as "fair”, while those in the second person are penalized. Gender markers produce the strongest effects, with non-binary subjects consistently favored and male subjects disfavored. We conjecture that these patterns reflect distributional and alignment biases learned during training, emphasizing the need for targeted fairness interventions in moral LLM applications.
Anthology ID:
2026.lrec-main.853
Volume:
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Month:
May
Year:
2026
Address:
Palma de Mallorca, Spain
Editors:
Stelios Piperidis, Núria Bel, Henk van den Heuvel, Nancy Ide, Simon Krek, Antonio Toral
Venue:
LREC
SIG:
Publisher:
ELRA Language Resource Association
Note:
Pages:
10897–10911
Language:
URL:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-lrec/2026.lrec-main.853/
DOI:
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
Gustavo Lucius Fernandes, Jeiverson Santos, and Pedro O.S Vaz-de-Melo. 2026. Widespread Gender and Pronoun Bias in Moral Judgments across LLMs. International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, main:10897–10911.
Cite (Informal):
Widespread Gender and Pronoun Bias in Moral Judgments across LLMs (Fernandes et al., LREC 2026)
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PDF:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-lrec/2026.lrec-main.853.pdf