Perspectives on How Sociology Can Advance Theorizing about Human-Chatbot Interaction and Developing Chatbots for Social Good
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Jul 7, 2025
Abstract
Recently, research into chatbots (also known as conversational agents, AI
agents, voice assistants), which are computer applications using artificial
intelligence to mimic human-like conversation, has grown sharply. Despite this
growth, sociology lags other disciplines (including computer science, medicine,
psychology, and communication) in publishing about chatbots. We suggest
sociology can advance understanding of human-chatbot interaction and offer four
sociological theories to enhance extant work in this field. The first two
theories (resource substitution theory, power-dependence theory) add new
insights to existing models of the drivers of chatbot use, which overlook
sociological concerns about how social structure (e.g., systemic
discrimination, the uneven distribution of resources within networks) inclines
individuals to use chatbots, including problematic levels of emotional
dependency on chatbots. The second two theories (affect control theory,
fundamental cause of disease theory) help inform the development of
chatbot-driven interventions that minimize safety risks and enhance equity by
leveraging sociological insights into how chatbot outputs could attend to
cultural contexts (e.g., affective norms) to promote wellbeing and enhance
communities (e.g., opportunities for civic participation). We discuss the value
of applying sociological theories for advancing theorizing about human-chatbot
interaction and developing chatbots for social good.