English

"Look! It's a Computer Program! It's an Algorithm! It's AI!": Does Terminology Affect Human Perceptions and Evaluations of Algorithmic Decision-Making Systems?

Human-Computer Interaction 2022-05-27 v2 Computers and Society

Abstract

In the media, in policy-making, but also in research articles, algorithmic decision-making (ADM) systems are referred to as algorithms, artificial intelligence, and computer programs, amongst other terms. We hypothesize that such terminological differences can affect people's perceptions of properties of ADM systems, people's evaluations of systems in application contexts, and the replicability of research as findings may be influenced by terminological differences. In two studies (N = 397, N = 622), we show that terminology does indeed affect laypeople's perceptions of system properties (e.g., perceived complexity) and evaluations of systems (e.g., trust). Our findings highlight the need to be mindful when choosing terms to describe ADM systems, because terminology can have unintended consequences, and may impact the robustness and replicability of HCI research. Additionally, our findings indicate that terminology can be used strategically (e.g., in communication about ADM systems) to influence people's perceptions and evaluations of these systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2108.11486,
  title  = {"Look! It's a Computer Program! It's an Algorithm! It's AI!": Does Terminology Affect Human Perceptions and Evaluations of Algorithmic Decision-Making Systems?},
  author = {Markus Langer and Tim Hunsicker and Tina Feldkamp and Cornelius J. König and Nina Grgić-Hlača},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.11486},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Preregistrations for the studies included in this paper are available under https://aspredicted.org/LDC\_GSM and https://aspredicted.org/NTE\_WND

R2 v1 2026-06-24T05:25:28.822Z