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Voice Assistant vs. Chatbot – Examining the Fit Between Conversational Agents’ Interaction Modalities and Information Search Tasks

Christine Rzepka, Benedikt Berger, Thomas Heß

2021Information Systems Frontiers131 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Owing to technological advancements in artificial intelligence, voice assistants (VAs) offer speech as a new interaction modality. Compared to text-based interaction, speech is natural and intuitive, which is why companies use VAs in customer service. However, we do not yet know for which kinds of tasks speech is beneficial. Drawing on task-technology fit theory, we present a research model to examine the applicability of VAs to different tasks. To test this model, we conducted a laboratory experiment with 116 participants who had to complete an information search task with a VA or a chatbot. The results show that speech exhibits higher perceived efficiency, lower cognitive effort, higher enjoyment, and higher service satisfaction than text-based interaction. We also find that these effects depend on the task’s goal-directedness. These findings extend task-technology fit theory to customers’ choice of interaction modalities and inform practitioners about the use of VAs for information search tasks.

Topics & Concepts

ChatbotModalitiesTask (project management)Computer scienceService (business)Modality (human–computer interaction)Customer serviceHuman–computer interactionCognitive psychologyPsychologyNatural language processingSociologySocial scienceManagementEconomyEconomicsAI in Service InteractionsTechnology Adoption and User BehaviourDigital Marketing and Social Media