Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.48548/pubdata-985
Resource typeDissertation
Title(s)Social Actor or Technology? Experimental Studies on the Perception of Chatbots Versus Humans and Their Implications for Anthropomorphic Chatbot Design
DOI10.48548/pubdata-985
Handle20.500.14123/1029
CreatorSeitz, Lennart  0000-0003-0070-0309 (Institut für Management & Organisation (IMO), Leuphana Universität Lüneburg  02w2y2t16)
RefereeBekmeier-Feuerhahn, Sigrid  1020691549
Loschelder, David  0000-0001-5818-0559  1167419588
Germelmann, Claas Christian  0000-0002-8581-3101
AdvisorBekmeier-Feuerhahn, Sigrid  1020691549
Other contributorsGohil, Krutika
AbstractAdvancements in AI and natural language processing have enabled chatbots to engage in highly human-like conversations. Additionally, many chatbots are intentionally equipped with various social cues, such as human avatars, to further enhance their human-like appearance. While most existing research highlights the social and beneficial perception of humanized chatbots, this thesis critically examines potential limitations. Through three empirical papers applying both qualitative and quantitative methods, this thesis demonstrates that users typically enter chatbot interactions with computer-like cognitive schemas, leading to different expectations compared to interactions with humans. For instance, users might expect chatbots to respond quickly, objectively, and without emotion. Social cues that clearly conflict with these expectations (e.g., empathetic expressions or response delays) can have adverse effects on central outcome dimensions like perceived authenticity, perceived usefulness, trust, and usage intentions. However, results provide evidence that these effects are moderated by individual and contextual factors, such as the user's inherent tendency to anthropomorphize chatbots. This thesis thus contributes to the ongoing debate on the (non-)social nature of chatbots by providing numerous theoretical insights and practical implications for anthropomorphic chatbot design. It also outlines future research directions and discusses emerging ethical challenges related to AI and chatbots, considering their societal impact and the potential rapid obsolescence of research findings.
LanguageEnglish
KeywordsChatbot; Artificial Intelligence; Dialogue System; Conversational Agent; Anthropomorphism; Social Response Theory
Date of defense2024-05-27
Year of publication in PubData2024
Publishing typeFirst publication
Date issued2024-06-17
Creation contextResearch
Granting InstitutionLeuphana Universität Lüneburg
Published byMedien- und Informationszentrum, Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
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