Do People Engage Cognitively with AI? Impact of AI Assistance on Incidental Learning
Krzysztof Z. Gajos, Lena Mamykina

TL;DR
This study investigates how different AI assistance formats influence decision quality and incidental learning, revealing that explanations alone promote deeper engagement and learning, unlike combined recommendations and explanations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that AI explanations without recommendations foster better decision-making and learning, highlighting the importance of presentation format for cognitive engagement with AI.
Findings
Explanations alone improve decision accuracy and learning.
Recommendations with explanations improve decisions but not learning.
Deeper engagement with explanations enhances incidental learning.
Abstract
When people receive advice while making difficult decisions, they often make better decisions in the moment and also increase their knowledge in the process. However, such incidental learning can only occur when people cognitively engage with the information they receive and process this information thoughtfully. How do people process the information and advice they receive from AI, and do they engage with it deeply enough to enable learning? To answer these questions, we conducted three experiments in which individuals were asked to make nutritional decisions and received simulated AI recommendations and explanations. In the first experiment, we found that when people were presented with both a recommendation and an explanation before making their choice, they made better decisions than they did when they received no such help, but they did not learn. In the second experiment,…
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