Title:
The Promise and the Peril of Equipping Service Chatbots with Emotions and Choices

dc.contributor.advisor Zhang, Han
dc.contributor.author Han, Elizabeth
dc.contributor.committeeMember Narasimhan, Sridhar
dc.contributor.committeeMember Lin, Mingfeng
dc.contributor.committeeMember Bond, Samuel
dc.contributor.committeeMember Yin, Dezhi
dc.contributor.department Business
dc.date.accessioned 2023-01-10T16:21:45Z
dc.date.available 2023-01-10T16:21:45Z
dc.date.created 2022-12
dc.date.issued 2022-08-17
dc.date.submitted December 2022
dc.date.updated 2023-01-10T16:21:45Z
dc.description.abstract The advance in AI-powered chatbot technologies and their rapid deployment in the service industry have attracted enormous interest from both researchers and practitioners in recent years. However, we still know little about the implications of equipping service chatbots with some important features such as emotional capabilities and choice provision. My dissertation not only investigates how customers respond to chatbots with emotional capabilities and choice-equipped chatbots during a service interaction, but also explores why and when these critical features would benefit or hurt customers. In my first essay, I examine the impact of positive emotion expressed by a chatbot on service evaluations. I show that chatbot-expressed positive emotion does not enhance service evaluations as in human-to-human interactions. Drawing on the emotional contagion and the expectation-disconfirmation theory, I further uncover the dual, affective and cognitive pathways underlying this non-effect and a boundary condition for the cognitive pathway. In my second essay, I explore the impact of empathy expressed by a service chatbot. Extending the social perception literature, I predict and reveal that chatbot-expressed empathy can either help or hurt service evaluations depending on the source of customers’ negative emotions. In the final essay, I draw on the fluency literature and investigate when and why the implementation of choices during a chatbot-driven service interaction enhances or impairs customers’ service experience. Through a series of experimental studies, this dissertation uncovers the promise and the peril of equipping chatbots with emotional and choice-provision capabilities in customer service. It also provides valuable insights for practitioners on the design and implementation of AI-powered chatbots in customer service and beyond.
dc.description.degree Ph.D.
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1853/70099
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
dc.subject Chatbot
dc.subject Customer service
dc.subject Expressed emotion
dc.subject Expressed empathy
dc.subject Choice
dc.title The Promise and the Peril of Equipping Service Chatbots with Emotions and Choices
dc.type Text
dc.type.genre Dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
local.contributor.advisor Zhang, Han
local.contributor.corporatename Scheller College of Business
relation.isAdvisorOfPublication f9807145-0abc-4234-8e19-e79346fe333c
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication a2f83831-ae41-4d65-82ff-c8bf95db4ffb
thesis.degree.level Doctoral
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