Litcius/Paper detail

Machinelike or Humanlike? A Literature Review of Anthropomorphism in AI-Enabled Technology

Mengjun Li, Ayoung Suh

2021Proceedings of the ... Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences/Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Due to the recent proliferation of AI-enabled technology (AIET), the concept of anthropomorphism, human likeness in technology, has increasingly attracted researchers’ attention. Researchers have examined how anthropomorphism influences users’ perception, adoption, and continued use of AIET. However, researchers have yet to agree on how to conceptualize and operationalize anthropomorphism in AIET, which has resulted in inconsistent findings. A comprehensive understanding is thus needed of the current state of research on anthropomorphism in AIET contexts. To conduct an in-depth analysis of the literature on anthropomorphism, we reviewed 35 empirical studies focusing on conceptualizing and operationalizing AIET anthropomorphism, and its antecedents and consequences. Based on our analysis, we discuss potential research gaps and offer directions for future research.

Topics & Concepts

OperationalizationPerceptionEmpirical researchPsychologyCognitive scienceCognitive psychologyEpistemologyComputer scienceData scienceNeurosciencePhilosophyAI in Service InteractionsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionEthics and Social Impacts of AI