Curtin University Homepage
  • Library
  • Help
    • Admin

    espace - Curtin’s institutional repository

    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
    View Item 
    • espace Home
    • espace
    • Curtin Research Publications
    • View Item
    • espace Home
    • espace
    • Curtin Research Publications
    • View Item

    Automated decision aids: When are they advisors and when do they take control of human decision making?

    89564.pdf (543.3Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Strickland, Luke
    Boag, Russell
    Heathcote, Andrew
    Bowden, Vanessa
    Loft, Shayne
    Date
    2022
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Strickland, L. and Boag, R. and Heathcote, A. and Bowden, V. and Loft, S. 2022. Automated decision aids: When are they advisors and when do they take control of human decision making? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied.
    Source Title
    Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied
    DOI
    10.1037/xap0000463
    ISSN
    1076-898X
    Faculty
    Faculty of Business and Law
    School
    Future of Work Institute
    Funding and Sponsorship
    http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP200101842
    Remarks

    Copyright © American Psychological Association, 2023. This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the authoritative document published in the APA journal. Please do not copy or cite without author's permission. The final article is available, upon publication, at: https://doi.org/10.1037/xap0000463.

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89739
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    We applied a computational model to examine the extent to which participants used an automated decision aid as an advisor, as compared to a more autonomous trigger of responding, at varying levels of decision aid reliability. In an air traffic control conflict detection task, we found higher accuracy when the decision aid was correct, and more errors when the decision aid was incorrect, as compared to a manual condition (no decision aid). Responses that were correct despite incorrect automated advice were slower than matched manual responses. Decision aids set at lower reliability (75%) had smaller effects on choices and response times, and were subjectively trusted less, than decision aids set at higher reliability (95%). We fitted an evidence accumulation model to choices and response times to measure how information processing was affected by decision aid inputs. Participants primarily treated low-reliability decision aids as an advisor rather than directly accumulating evidence based on its advice. Participants directly accumulated evidence based upon the advice of high-reliability decision aids, consistent with granting decision aids more autonomous influence over decisions. Individual differences in the level of direct accumulation correlated with subjective trust, suggesting a cognitive mechanism by which trust impacts human decisions.

    Related items

    Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

    • Inhibitory cognitive control allows automated advice to improve accuracy while minimizing misuse
      Strickland, Luke ; Heathcote, Andrew; Bowden, Vanessa; Boag, Russell; Wilson, Micah ; Khan, Samha; Loft, Shayne (2021)
      Humans increasingly use automated decision aids. However, environmental uncertainty means that automated advice can be incorrect, creating the potential for humans to action incorrect advice or to disregard correct advice. ...
    • Modelling how humans use decision aids in simulated air traffic control
      Strickland, Luke ; Bowden, Vanessa; Boag, Russell; Heathcote, Andrew; Loft, Shayne (2020)
      Air traffic controllers must often decide whether pairs of aircraft will violate safe standards of separation in the future, a task known as conflict detection. Recent research has applied evidence accumulation models ...
    • An exploration of the global development of emerging country multinationals : a study of strategic ambitions and talent management in China and India
      Liu, Yi (2012)
      Since Jim O’Neill, the Goldman Sachs economist, coined the acronym of the BRIC countries in 2001 the concept has attracted an infectious logic. The growth of the four BRIC countries, Brazil, Russia, India, and China, is ...
    Advanced search

    Browse

    Communities & CollectionsIssue DateAuthorTitleSubjectDocument TypeThis CollectionIssue DateAuthorTitleSubjectDocument Type

    My Account

    Admin

    Statistics

    Most Popular ItemsStatistics by CountryMost Popular Authors

    Follow Curtin

    • 
    • 
    • 
    • 
    • 

    CRICOS Provider Code: 00301JABN: 99 143 842 569TEQSA: PRV12158

    Copyright | Disclaimer | Privacy statement | Accessibility

    Curtin would like to pay respect to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander members of our community by acknowledging the traditional owners of the land on which the Perth campus is located, the Whadjuk people of the Nyungar Nation; and on our Kalgoorlie campus, the Wongutha people of the North-Eastern Goldfields.