Persuading Patients Using Rhetoric to Improve Artificial Intelligence Adoption: Experimental Study

Artificial intelligence (AI) can transform health care processes with its increasing ability to translate complex structured and unstructured data into actionable clinical decisions. Although it has been established that AI is much more efficient than a clinician, the adoption rate has been slower i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medical Internet research 2023-03, Vol.25 (1), p.e41430-e41430
Hauptverfasser: Sebastian, Glorin, George, Amrita, Jackson, Jr, George
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Artificial intelligence (AI) can transform health care processes with its increasing ability to translate complex structured and unstructured data into actionable clinical decisions. Although it has been established that AI is much more efficient than a clinician, the adoption rate has been slower in health care. Prior studies have pointed out that the lack of trust in AI, privacy concerns, degrees of customer innovativeness, and perceived novelty value influence AI adoption. With the promotion of AI products to patients, the role of rhetoric in influencing these factors has received scant attention. The main objective of this study was to examine whether communication strategies (ethos, pathos, and logos) are more successful in overcoming factors that hinder AI product adoption among patients. We conducted experiments in which we manipulated the communication strategy (ethos, pathos, and logos) in promotional ads for an AI product. We collected responses from 150 participants using Amazon Mechanical Turk. Participants were randomly exposed to a specific rhetoric-based advertisement during the experiments. Our results indicate that using communication strategies to promote an AI product affects users' trust, customer innovativeness, and perceived novelty value, leading to improved product adoption. Pathos-laden promotions improve AI product adoption by nudging users' trust (n=52; β=.532; P
ISSN:1438-8871
1439-4456
1438-8871
DOI:10.2196/41430