Interacting with Man or Machine: When Do Humans Reason Better?
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Publisher
DOI
doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.03315
Journal
Management Science
ISSN
1526-5501
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The resolution of complex problems is widely seen as the next challenge for hybrid human–artificial intelligence (AI) teams. This paper uses experiments to assess whether there is a difference in the quality of human reasoning depending on whether the humans interact with humans or algorithms. For this purpose, we design an interactive reasoning task and compare the performance of humans when paired with other humans and AI. Varying the difficulty of the task (i.e., steps of counterfactual reasoning required), we find that, for simple tasks, subjects perform much better if they play with other humans, whereas the opposite is true for difficult problems. Additional experiments in which subjects play with human experts show that the differences are driven by the knowledge that AI reasons correctly rather than that it is nonhuman.
Authors
Renou, L; Bayer, R-CCollections
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