The Adoption and Usage of AI Agents: Early Evidence from Perplexity
Jeremy Yang, Noah Yonack, Kate Zyskowski, Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho, Jerry Ma

TL;DR
This large-scale study analyzes how diverse user groups adopt and utilize AI agents like Comet, revealing usage patterns, key use cases, and implications for various sectors based on extensive user interaction data.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical taxonomy of AI agent use cases and provides empirical insights into adoption patterns, usage intensity, and evolving user behaviors.
Findings
Adoption varies significantly across user segments and regions.
Productivity and learning are the most common use case topics.
User engagement shifts towards more cognitively demanding tasks over time.
Abstract
This paper presents the first large-scale field study of the adoption, usage intensity, and use cases of general-purpose AI agents operating in open-world web environments. Our analysis centers on Comet, an AI-powered browser developed by Perplexity, and its integrated agent, Comet Assistant. Drawing on hundreds of millions of anonymized user interactions, we address three fundamental questions: Who is using AI agents? How intensively are they using them? And what are they using them for? Our findings reveal substantial heterogeneity in adoption and usage across user segments. Earlier adopters, users in countries with higher GDP per capita and educational attainment, and individuals working in digital or knowledge-intensive sectors -- such as digital technology, academia, finance, marketing, and entrepreneurship -- are more likely to adopt or actively use the agent. To systematically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAI in Service Interactions · Ethics and Social Impacts of AI · Multi-Agent Systems and Negotiation
