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Main Authors: Shajari, Baran, Liu, Xiaoran, Dagenais, Kyanna, David, Istvan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07535
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author Shajari, Baran
Liu, Xiaoran
Dagenais, Kyanna
David, Istvan
author_facet Shajari, Baran
Liu, Xiaoran
Dagenais, Kyanna
David, Istvan
contents Studies show that interactions with an AI system fosters trust in human users towards AI. An often overlooked element of such interaction dynamics is the (sense of) urgency when the human user is prompted by an AI agent, e.g., for advice or guidance. In this paper, we show that although the presence of urgency in human-AI interactions does not affect the trust in AI, it may be detrimental to the human user's self-confidence and self-efficacy. In the long run, the loss of confidence may lead to performance loss, suboptimal decisions, human errors, and ultimately, unsustainable AI systems. Our evidence comes from an experiment with 30 human participants. Our results indicate that users may feel more confident in their work when they are eased into the human-AI setup rather than exposed to it without preparation. We elaborate on the implications of this finding for software engineers and decision-makers.
format Preprint
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publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Trust the AI, Doubt Yourself: The Effect of Urgency on Self-Confidence in Human-AI Interaction
Shajari, Baran
Liu, Xiaoran
Dagenais, Kyanna
David, Istvan
Artificial Intelligence
Studies show that interactions with an AI system fosters trust in human users towards AI. An often overlooked element of such interaction dynamics is the (sense of) urgency when the human user is prompted by an AI agent, e.g., for advice or guidance. In this paper, we show that although the presence of urgency in human-AI interactions does not affect the trust in AI, it may be detrimental to the human user's self-confidence and self-efficacy. In the long run, the loss of confidence may lead to performance loss, suboptimal decisions, human errors, and ultimately, unsustainable AI systems. Our evidence comes from an experiment with 30 human participants. Our results indicate that users may feel more confident in their work when they are eased into the human-AI setup rather than exposed to it without preparation. We elaborate on the implications of this finding for software engineers and decision-makers.
title Trust the AI, Doubt Yourself: The Effect of Urgency on Self-Confidence in Human-AI Interaction
topic Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07535