A Mind in Intelligent Personal Assistants: An Empirical Study of Mind-Based Anthropomorphism, Fulfilled Motivations, and Exploratory Usage of Intelligent Personal Assistants.

Cuicui Cao, Yingying Hu, Haoxuan Xu
Author Information
  1. Cuicui Cao: School of Management, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China.
  2. Yingying Hu: School of Information Management and Statistics, Hubei University of Economics, Wuhan, China.
  3. Haoxuan Xu: School of Business Administration, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, Wuhan, China.

Abstract

Intelligent personal assistants (IPAs) own anthropomorphic features which enable users' perception of anthropomorphism. Adopting the perspective of mind-based anthropomorphism, the purpose of this paper is to investigate how mind-based anthropomorphism influences users' exploratory usage of IPAs. Based on the notion that anthropomorphism can satisfy people's sociality and effectance motivation, we hypothesize that mind-based anthropomorphism can enhance people's social connection with IPAs and IPA self-efficacy, which can in turn influence their exploratory usage of IPAs. Questionnaires were developed and distributed to users who had experience in smart speaker-based IPAs on Wenjuanxing and 551 valid questionnaires were collected to test the research model. The results revealed that cognitive and affective anthropomorphism exerted common and differential impacts on IPA self-efficacy and social connection. Cognitive anthropomorphism versus affective anthropomorphism had stronger influences on IPA self-efficacy, while affective anthropomorphism had stronger impacts on social connection. Both IPA self-efficacy and social connection enhanced users' intentions to explore IPAs. This study enriches previous studies on IPA adoption or post-adoption by investigating exploratory usage which captures how users are deeply engaged with IPAs.

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