Author:
Schmitt Anuschka, ,Zierau Naim,Janson Andreas,Leimeister Jan Marco, , ,
Abstract
The pervasiveness and increasing sophistication of artificial intelligence (AI)-based artifacts within
private, organizational, and social realms are changing how humans interact with machines. Theorizing
about the way that humans perceive AI-based artifacts is, for example, crucial to understanding why and
to what extent humans deem these artifacts to be competent for decision-making but has traditionally
taken a modality-agnostic view. In this paper, we theorize about a particular case of interaction, namely
that of voice-based interaction with AI-based artifacts. We argue that the capabilities and perceived
naturalness of such artifacts, fueled by continuous advances in natural language processing, induce users
to deem an artifact as able to act autonomously in a goal-oriented manner. We show that there is a positive
direct relationship between the voice capabilities of an artifact and users’ agency attribution, ultimately
obscuring the artifact’s true nature and competencies. This relationship is further moderated by the
artifact’s actual agency, uncertainty, and user characteristics.
Publisher
Association for Information Systems
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Information Systems
Cited by
2 articles.
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