Publication | Closed Access
Impact of intelligent decision aids on expert and novice decision‐makers’ judgments
125
Citations
39
References
2004
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingBusiness IntelligenceDecision AnalysisCognitionIndividual Decision MakingJudgmental ForecastingIntelligent SystemsDecision AnalyticsPsychologySocial SciencesBiasManagementNovice Decision‐makersDecision TheoryCognitive ScienceExpert SystemsDecision Support SystemsAutomated Decision-makingInteractive Decision MakingAbstract BusinessesDecision-makingIntelligent Decision MakingIntelligent Decision AidsDecision ScienceDifferential Expertise LevelsDecision Technology
Abstract Businesses have invested tremendous resources into intelligent decision aid development. A good match between user and aid may improve the expert decision‐maker's decision quality. However, novices may be prone to poorer decision‐making if intelligent decision aids are more expert than the user. The present paper provides an empirical test of the impact of decision aids on subjects with differential expertise levels. The results support the contention that intelligent decision aids aggravate bias in novices’ decision‐making but mitigate bias in experts’ decision‐making processes. Intelligent decision aids may be best viewed as complements to expert decision‐makers during complex problem analysis and resolution.
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