Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Lower Artificial Intelligence Literacy Predicts Greater AI Receptivity
View through CrossRef
As artificial intelligence (AI) transforms society, understanding factors that influence AI receptivity is increasingly important. The current research investigates which types of consumers have greater AI receptivity. Contrary to expectations revealed in four surveys, cross country data and six additional studies find that people with lower AI literacy are typically more receptive to AI. This lower literacy-greater receptivity link is not explained by differences in perceptions of AI’s capability, ethicality, or feared impact on humanity. Instead, this link occurs because people with lower AI literacy are more likely to perceive AI as magical and experience feelings of awe in the face of AI’s execution of tasks that seem to require uniquely human attributes. In line with this theorizing, the lower literacy-higher receptivity link is mediated by perceptions of AI as magical and is moderated among tasks not assumed to require distinctly human attributes. These findings suggest that companies may benefit from shifting their marketing efforts and product development towards consumers with lower AI literacy. Additionally, efforts to demystify AI may inadvertently reduce its appeal, indicating that maintaining an aura of magic around AI could be beneficial for adoption.
Title: Lower Artificial Intelligence Literacy Predicts Greater AI Receptivity
Description:
As artificial intelligence (AI) transforms society, understanding factors that influence AI receptivity is increasingly important.
The current research investigates which types of consumers have greater AI receptivity.
Contrary to expectations revealed in four surveys, cross country data and six additional studies find that people with lower AI literacy are typically more receptive to AI.
This lower literacy-greater receptivity link is not explained by differences in perceptions of AI’s capability, ethicality, or feared impact on humanity.
Instead, this link occurs because people with lower AI literacy are more likely to perceive AI as magical and experience feelings of awe in the face of AI’s execution of tasks that seem to require uniquely human attributes.
In line with this theorizing, the lower literacy-higher receptivity link is mediated by perceptions of AI as magical and is moderated among tasks not assumed to require distinctly human attributes.
These findings suggest that companies may benefit from shifting their marketing efforts and product development towards consumers with lower AI literacy.
Additionally, efforts to demystify AI may inadvertently reduce its appeal, indicating that maintaining an aura of magic around AI could be beneficial for adoption.
Related Results
Individual Differences in Receptivity to Scientific Bullshit
Individual Differences in Receptivity to Scientific Bullshit
Pseudo profound bullshit receptivity is the tendency to perceive meaning in important-sounding, nonsense statements. To understand how bullshit receptivity differs across domains, ...
P-426 Tissue-resident Pseudomonas aeruginosa impairs endometrial receptivity via T3SS-mediated STAT3 signaling inhibition
P-426 Tissue-resident Pseudomonas aeruginosa impairs endometrial receptivity via T3SS-mediated STAT3 signaling inhibition
Abstract
Study question
Does Pseudomonas aeruginosa impair endometrial receptivity by inhibiting STAT3 phosphorylation through i...
Studying the functional literacy of schoolchildren based on the use of educational content about Russia and Ethiopia: results of testing diagnostic tools
Studying the functional literacy of schoolchildren based on the use of educational content about Russia and Ethiopia: results of testing diagnostic tools
Introduction. In the context of developing cooperation between Russia and Ethiopia, projects are being implemented
that provide Ethiopian teachers and students with access to mode...
Digital literacy instruction in academic libraries in KwaZulu-Natal
Digital literacy instruction in academic libraries in KwaZulu-Natal
Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) has become an integral tool in enhancing library services worldwide. ICT can be used as a tool for acquisition of digital literac...
Can earlier literacy skills have a negative impact on future home literacy activities? Evidence from Japanese
Can earlier literacy skills have a negative impact on future home literacy activities? Evidence from Japanese
We examined the cross‐lagged relations between the home literacy environment and literacy skills in Japanese, and whether child's gender, parents' education and child's level of li...
Development of Measurement Scale and its Reliability and Validity Test of Medical College Students' Medication Literacy
Development of Measurement Scale and its Reliability and Validity Test of Medical College Students' Medication Literacy
AbstractWhat is known and objective: Irrational drug use has become a global problem threatening human health. As future doctors, pharmacists and other relevant professionals, medi...
Literacy, Information, and Development in Morocco During The 1990s
Literacy, Information, and Development in Morocco During The 1990s
Literacy, Information, and Development in Morocco during the 1990s offers readers a two-level investigation of the culture of literacy. A handful of researchers approach literacy e...
Linking Contemporary Research on Youth, Literacy, and Popular Culture With Literacy Teacher Education
Linking Contemporary Research on Youth, Literacy, and Popular Culture With Literacy Teacher Education
The aim of this article is to expand the dialogue about how contemporary scholarship on the intersections between youth, literacy, and popular culture might inform literacy teacher...

