logo
Loading...
Algorithmic versus human surveillance leads to lower perceptions of autonomy and increased resistance
PsychologyCommunications Psychology

Algorithmic versus human surveillance leads to lower perceptions of autonomy and increased resistance

R. Schlund and E. M. Zitek

This research by Rachel Schlund and Emily M. Zitek delves into how algorithmic surveillance affects people's sense of autonomy and their willingness to push back. Through a series of four experiments, findings reveal that algorithmic oversight is linked to decreased autonomy and heightened resistance. However, presenting algorithmic surveillance in a developmental context can alleviate some of these concerns.... show more
Abstract
Past research indicates that people tend to react adversely to surveillance, but does it matter if advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence conduct surveillance rather than humans? Across four experiments (Study 1, N = 107; Study 2, N = 157; Study 3, N = 117; Study 4, N = 814), we examined how participants reacted to monitoring and evaluation by human or algorithmic surveillance when recalling instances of surveillance from their lives (Study 1), generating ideas (Studies 2 and 3), or imagining working in a call center (Study 4). Our results revealed that participants subjected to algorithmic (v. human) surveillance perceived they had less autonomy (Studies 1, 3, and 4), criticized the surveillance more (Studies 1–3), performed worse (Studies 2 and 3), and reported greater intentions to resist (Studies 1 and 4). Framing the purpose of the algorithmic surveillance as developmental, and thus informational, as opposed to evaluative, mitigated the perception of decreased autonomy and level of resistance (Study 4).
Publisher
Communications Psychology
Published On
Jun 06, 2024
Authors
Rachel Schlund, Emily M. Zitek
Tags
algorithmic surveillancehuman surveillanceperceived autonomyresistancepsychological effects
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny