Litcius/Paper detail

The Placebo Effect of Artificial Intelligence in Human–Computer Interaction

Thomas Kosch, Robin Welsch, Lewis L. Chuang, Albrecht Schmidt

2022ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction123 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In medicine, patients can obtain real benefits from a sham treatment. These benefits are known as the placebo effect. We report two experiments (Experiment I: N = 369; Experiment II: N = 100) demonstrating a placebo effect in adaptive interfaces. Participants were asked to solve word puzzles while being supported by no system or an adaptive AI interface. All participants experienced the same word puzzle difficulty and had no support from an AI throughout the experiments. Our results showed that the belief of receiving adaptive AI support increases expectations regarding the participant’s own task performance, sustained after interaction. These expectations were positively correlated to performance, as indicated by the number of solved word puzzles. We integrate our findings into technological acceptance theories and discuss implications for the future assessment of AI-based user interfaces and novel technologies. We argue that system descriptions can elicit placebo effects through user expectations biasing the results of user-centered studies.

Topics & Concepts

PlaceboTask (project management)Computer scienceWord (group theory)Artificial intelligenceHuman–computer interactionInterface (matter)PsychologyCognitive psychologyMachine learningMedicineMathematicsEngineeringBubbleAlternative medicineGeometryMaximum bubble pressure methodPathologyParallel computingSystems engineeringPain Management and Placebo EffectNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts
The Placebo Effect of Artificial Intelligence in Human–Computer Interaction | Litcius