Do Users Really Want "Human-like" AI? The Effects of Anthropomorphism and Ego-morphism on User's Perceived Anthropocentric Threat.
Joohee KimIl ImPublished in: HICSS (2024)
Keyphrases
- user satisfaction
- cognitive effort
- user interaction
- user interface
- end users
- novice users
- user studies
- multiple users
- user oriented
- user profiles
- user requirements
- user model
- user feedback
- collaborative filtering
- user experience
- user perceptions
- recommender systems
- user involvement
- user groups
- computer users
- user interests
- single user
- user centric
- internet users
- individual user
- user requests
- query formulation
- active user
- information overload
- user centered
- artificial intelligence
- user activity
- helping users
- user privacy
- personalized services
- location information
- user activities
- user participation
- user specific
- user preferences
- expert systems
- feedback mechanisms
- result set
- human users
- social networking services
- social awareness
- casual users
- mouse clicks
- query refinement
- multimodal interfaces
- user acceptance
- web interface
- perceived usefulness
- implicit feedback
- user behavior
- desired information
- collaborative tagging
- micro blogging
- positive effects
- user ratings
- information systems