Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) and people’s interactions with it – through virtual agents, socialbots, and language-generation software – do not fit neatly into paradigms of communication theory that have long focused on human-human communication.
To address this disconnect between communication theory and emerging technology, this article provides a starting point for articulating the differences between communicative AI and previous technologies and introduces a theoretical basis for navigating these conditions in the form of scholarship within human–machine communication (HMC).
Drawing on an HMC framework, we outline a research agenda built around three key aspects of communicative AI technologies:
- the functional dimensions through which people make sense of these devices and applications as communicators,
- the relational dynamics through which people associate with these technologies and, in turn, relate to themselves and others, and
- the metaphysical implications called up by blurring ontological boundaries surrounding what constitutes human, machine, and communication.
AI, artificial_intelligence, communication_research, human-computer_interaction, human-machine_communication, media_studies, ontological_classification, social_configurations,
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