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dc.contributorDepartment of Management and Marketingen_US
dc.contributor.advisorXu, Xin (MM)en_US
dc.creatorXie, Wen-
dc.identifier.urihttps://theses.lib.polyu.edu.hk/handle/200/12764-
dc.languageEnglishen_US
dc.publisherHong Kong Polytechnic Universityen_US
dc.rightsAll rights reserveden_US
dc.titleTwo studies of human-AI interactionsen_US
dcterms.abstractIn light of the vital role of artificial intelligence (AI) and the distinctive characteristics of AI (such as anthropomorphism, inexplicability, and natural language), AI can be extremely beneficial to us. However, human-AI interaction inefficiency is very common (Agomuoh, 2023; Cem, 2023). It is necessary for us to better understand how users and AI communicate and how users feel in a world where humans and AI co-exist.en_US
dcterms.abstractThis thesis consists of two AI research. This first study discusses how chatbot designs affect the human-chatbot interaction process and, thus, influence human-AI interaction outcomes. Chatbots are gaining momentum in a variety of business functions, such as IT service, human resource management, customer service, and sales. Although chatbot proactivity design and social identity design are popular in the industry, limited existing research on chatbots has investigated chatbot proactivity design and its role as a boundary condition of chatbot social identity design. In order to optimize user evaluation on the service with chatbots, there is thus a need from both the business and the academia aspects to better understand how chatbot social designs affect the human-chatbot conversational process and, in turn, affect user perception and task success from the perspective of uncertainty reduction. The field experiment results reveal that proactivity design will decrease communication inefficiency and, thus, increase customer satisfaction and the probability of task success. Furthermore, chatbot social identity design weakens the negative effect on customer satisfaction made by ineffective communication.en_US
dcterms.abstractThe second study investigates how the introduction of a hybrid human-AI service affects user evaluations of the service. AI and humans do have their own advantages when facing different tasks in digital platforms—for example, AI agents are better skilled in reliability, scalability, speed, accuracy, and generalization, while human agents are better skilled in creativity, judgment, and empathy (Rai and Sarker, 2019). A Human-AI hybrid service system can benefit from both AI and Human agents’ advantages, and it is of interest to study the impact of human-AI hybrid services in digital platforms. In particular, our study examines the associations between human-AI hybrid services and user evaluations in the context of a major audio streaming platform. On the platform, the introduction of AI podcasters creates the phenomenon—for the same audio, sometimes the AI voice version is released first, and sometimes the human voice version is released first. This provides us with a great opportunity to study how the introduction of a human-AI hybrid service affects user evaluations of the service from a temporal perspective. The empirical findings show that the user evaluations of those who are first exposed to a human service are improved with the presence of the human-AI hybrid service, and the user evaluations of those who are first exposed to an AI service get worse with the presence of the human-AI hybrid service. Our findings have important implications for both digital platforms and AI developers.en_US
dcterms.extentvii, 102 pages : color illustrationsen_US
dcterms.isPartOfPolyU Electronic Thesesen_US
dcterms.issued2023en_US
dcterms.educationalLevelPh.D.en_US
dcterms.educationalLevelAll Doctorateen_US
dcterms.LCSHArtificial intelligenceen_US
dcterms.LCSHHuman-computer interactionen_US
dcterms.LCSHHong Kong Polytechnic University -- Dissertationsen_US
dcterms.accessRightsopen accessen_US

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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://theses.lib.polyu.edu.hk/handle/200/12764