Taking Algorithmic (Vs. Human) Advice Reveals Different Goals to Others

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Abstract

People are increasingly likely to obtain advice from algorithms. But what does taking advice from an algorithm (as opposed to a human) reveal to others about the advice seekers’ goals? In five studies (total N = 1927), we find that observers attribute the primary goal that an algorithm is designed to pursue in a situation to advice seekers. As a result, when explaining advice seekers’ subsequent behaviors and decisions, primarily this goal is taken into account, leaving less room for other possible motives that could account for people’s actions. Such secondary goals are, however, more readily taken into account when (the same) advice comes from human advisors, leading to different judgments about advice seekers’ motives. Specifically, advice seekers’ goals were perceived differently in terms of fairness, profit-seeking, and prosociality depending on whether the obtained advice came from an algorithm or another human. We find that these differences are in part guided by the different expectations people have of the type of information that algorithmic- vs. human advisors take into account when making their recommendations. The presented work has implications for (algorithmic) fairness perceptions and human-computer interaction.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)45-54
Number of pages10
JournalInternational Journal of Human-Computer Interaction
Volume40
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Funding

The work of EE was supported by the Small Scale Research grant of the Graduate School of Business and Economics [33101005N]. The work of ŠB and MV was supported by the Excellent Teams Project of the Faculty of Business Administration, Prague University of Economics and Business [IP310031].

Keywords

  • Advice-taking
  • fairness
  • goals
  • human-computer interaction

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