An extension of the theory of technology dominance: Capturing the underlying causal complexity |
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Institution: | 1. Digaudit Research Group, NHH Norwegian School of Economics, Norway;2. Kenneth G. Dixon School of Accounting, University of Central Florida, United States;3. University of Dayton, United States |
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Abstract: | The Theory of Technology Dominance (TTD) provides a theoretical foundation for understanding how intelligent systems impact human decision-making. The theory has three phases with propositions related to (1) the foundations of reliance, (2) short-term effects on novice versus expert decision-making, and (3) long-term epistemological effects related to individual deskilling and profession-wide stagnation. In this theory paper, we propose an extension of TTD, that we refer to as TTD2, primarily to increase our theoretical understanding of how, why, and when the short-term and long-term effects on decision-making occur and why advances in technology design have exacerbated some weaknesses and eroded some benefits. Recently, researchers have called for reconsideration of how we design intelligent systems to mitigate the detrimental effects of technology; in TTD2 we provide a theory-based understanding for capturing the complexity underlying the occurrence of the effects. |
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Keywords: | Technology Dominance Deskilling Automation Bias Distributed Cognition Transactive Memory Systems Artificial Intelligence Digitization Intelligent Systems Algorithm Aversion Reliance Model |
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