Friday, October 3, 2025

About that Resume

Some companies these days use LLMs to review resumes. But it turns out they have an agenda

Using a large-scale controlled resume correspondence experiment, we find that LLMs consistently prefer resumes generated by themselves over those written by humans or produced by alternative models, even when content quality is controlled. The bias against human-written resumes is particularly substantial, with self-preference bias ranging from 68% to 88% across major commercial and open-source models. To assess labor market impact, we simulate realistic hiring pipelines across 24 occupations. These simulations show that candidates using the same LLM as the evaluator are 23% to 60% more likely to be shortlisted than equally qualified applicants submitting human-written resumes, with the largest disadvantages observed in business-related fields such as sales and accounting. We further demonstrate that this bias can be reduced by more than 50% through simple interventions targeting LLMs’ self-recognition capabilities.

1 comment:

G. Verloren said...

You mean a piece of software whose entire functionality revolves around conforming to probability tables regarding which word should appear next in a sentence...

...ends up displaying a bias toward written pieces where the sentence structures that more closely match said probability percentages that the software itself favors?

WHO'DA THUNK IT!