Automation bias

Automation bias is the propensity for humans to favor suggestions from automated decision-making systems and to ignore contradictory information made without automation, even if it is correct.[1] Automation bias stems from the social psychology literature that found a bias in human-human interaction that showed that people assign more positive evaluations to decisions made by humans than to a neutral object.[2] The same type of positivity bias has been found for human-automation interaction,[3] where the automated decisions are rated more positively than neutral.[4] This has become a growing problem for decision making as intensive care units, nuclear power plants, and aircraft cockpits have increasingly integrated computerized system monitors and decision aids to mostly factor out possible human error. Errors of automation bias tend to occur when decision-making is dependent on computers or other automated aids and the human is in an observatory role but able to make decisions. Examples of automation bias range from urgent matters like flying a plane on automatic pilot to such mundane matters as the use of spell-checking programs.[5]

  1. ^ Cummings, Mary (2004). "Automation Bias in Intelligent Time Critical Decision Support Systems" (PDF). AIAA 1st Intelligent Systems Technical Conference (PDF). doi:10.2514/6.2004-6313. ISBN 978-1-62410-080-2. S2CID 10328335. Archived from the original on 2014-11-01.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ Bruner, J. S., & Tagiuri, R. 1954. "The perception of people". In G. Lindzey (Ed.), Handbook of social psychology (vol 2): 634-654. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
  3. ^ Madhavan, P.; Wiegmann, D. A. (2007-07-01). "Similarities and differences between human–human and human–automation trust: an integrative review". Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science. 8 (4): 277–301. doi:10.1080/14639220500337708. S2CID 39064140.
  4. ^ Dzindolet, Mary T.; Peterson, Scott A.; Pomranky, Regina A.; Pierce, Linda G.; Beck, Hall P. (2003). "The role of trust in automation reliance". International Journal of Human-Computer Studies. 58 (6): 697–718. doi:10.1016/S1071-5819(03)00038-7.
  5. ^ Skitka, Linda. "Automation". University of Illinois. University of Illinois at Chicago. Retrieved 16 January 2017.

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