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Evidence (7631 claims)

Adoption
8570 claims
Productivity
7631 claims
Governance
6869 claims
Human-AI Collaboration
6491 claims
Org Design
4175 claims
Innovation
4114 claims
Labor Markets
3566 claims
Skills & Training
2966 claims
Inequality
2066 claims

Evidence Matrix

Claim counts by outcome category and direction of finding.

Outcome Positive Negative Mixed Null Total
Other 758 199 100 900 2007
Governance & Regulation 826 400 191 122 1563
Organizational Efficiency 777 193 124 84 1189
Technology Adoption Rate 635 233 124 97 1098
Research Productivity 422 128 57 336 954
Output Quality 476 179 59 47 761
Decision Quality 328 177 81 47 640
Firm Productivity 435 57 88 20 606
AI Safety & Ethics 218 277 65 33 599
Market Structure 180 170 123 24 502
Task Allocation 213 64 72 33 387
Skill Acquisition 170 61 61 17 309
Innovation Output 203 27 43 18 292
Employment Level 105 54 107 13 281
Fiscal & Macroeconomic 131 69 43 26 276
Consumer Welfare 117 63 42 11 233
Firm Revenue 153 48 26 3 230
Task Completion Time 173 31 8 12 225
Inequality Measures 44 122 49 6 221
Worker Satisfaction 89 65 22 12 188
Error Rate 69 92 10 2 173
Regulatory Compliance 77 69 14 5 165
Automation Exposure 56 56 26 13 154
Training Effectiveness 94 21 13 19 149
Wages & Compensation 77 36 25 6 144
Team Performance 86 17 27 10 141
Developer Productivity 95 17 14 6 133
Job Displacement 12 80 20 1 113
Hiring & Recruitment 52 7 8 3 70
Creative Output 31 18 8 3 61
Skill Obsolescence 5 46 6 1 58
Social Protection 27 16 8 2 53
Labor Share of Income 17 19 17 53
Worker Turnover 11 12 3 26
Industry 1 1
Clear
Productivity Remove filter
The proposed approach will increase demand for edge/embedded ML expertise, GNN optimization, and HAPS integration, shifting supplier ecosystems and labor requirements.
Workforce and supply-chain implication stated in the paper's discussion of economic impacts; based on projected capabilities required to implement FL+GNN solutions, not on labor-market measurements.
low positive Federated Learning-driven Beam Management in LEO 6G Non-Terr... demand for specialized skills and supplier ecosystem changes (speculative)
FL reduces raw-data movement across jurisdictions, easing regulatory compliance for cross-border NTN services and supporting privacy-preserving business models.
Implication derived from the federated approach (local model updates vs. raw-data transfer) noted in the paper; no legal/regulatory case studies or measurements provided.
low positive Federated Learning-driven Beam Management in LEO 6G Non-Terr... cross-jurisdictional raw-data transfer / regulatory compliance burden (qualitati...
HAPS-as-aggregator creates a distributed service layer between satellites and terrestrial infrastructure, enabling new roles (HAPS operators, FL orchestration providers) and revenue streams.
Paper's market-structure implications: conceptual argument that HAPS aggregation in an FL architecture yields opportunities for new service roles and monetization; no market or revenue analysis provided.
low positive Federated Learning-driven Beam Management in LEO 6G Non-Terr... emergence of new service roles and revenue opportunities (speculative)
Lightweight GNNs enable more intelligence on-board or at HAPS without requiring major hardware upgrades, potentially deferring capital expenditures (CapEx).
Economic/operational implication in the paper based on the stated compactness of the GNN model and its suitability for edge/on-board deployment; no quantified hardware or CapEx comparison provided.
low positive Federated Learning-driven Beam Management in LEO 6G Non-Terr... hardware upgrade requirements / capital expenditure (speculative)
Improved predictive beam selection (from the proposed GNN/FL approach) reduces link outages and retransmissions, cutting operational costs and improving user experience.
Economic implication stated in the paper linking better beam prediction/stability (experimentally observed) to reduced outages and retransmissions; no direct measurement of outages/retransmissions or operational cost savings reported in the summary.
low positive Federated Learning-driven Beam Management in LEO 6G Non-Terr... link outages and retransmissions; operational cost (not directly measured)
Adopting DPS-like efficiencies reduces the marginal compute cost of online prompt-selection workflows (dominated by rollouts), thereby shortening finetuning cycles and increasing developer productivity.
Paper's implications section: logical inference from reported reduction in rollouts and rollout compute; not an empirical market study—no dollar or industry-scale numbers provided.
low positive Dynamics-Predictive Sampling for Active RL Finetuning of Lar... marginal compute cost of RL finetuning; finetuning cycle time; developer product...
There is a strong complementarity between AI investments and organizational change: firms with better leadership, cross-functional processes, and data practices capture disproportionate benefits, implying increasing returns to scale and potential winner-take-most dynamics.
Authors' theoretical inference from cross-case patterns and economic reasoning; supported qualitatively by cases showing disproportionate gains in better-managed firms.
low positive Optimizing integrated supply planning in logistics: Bridging... firm-level performance gains and potential market concentration effects
Policy should incentivize transparency, auditability, standards for human–AI interfaces, workforce development, certification of teaming practices, and liability frameworks to ensure accountability and equitable outcomes.
Normative recommendation based on ethical and governance considerations synthesized in the paper; not supported by policy evaluation evidence within the paper.
low positive Toward a science of human–AI teaming for decision-making: A ... policy outcomes such as levels of transparency, auditability, workforce skill de...
Orchestrating attention and interrogation through interface and workflow design helps manage what humans and AI focus on and how they challenge/verify each other, thereby reducing errors and misuse.
Prescriptive claim grounded in human factors and HCI literature synthesized by the authors; the paper suggests these mechanisms but does not report empirical trials demonstrating effects.
low positive Toward a science of human–AI teaming for decision-making: A ... error detection rates, misuse rates, verification frequency, and decision accura...
Design principles (define goals/constraints, partition roles, orchestrate attention/interrogation, build knowledge infrastructures, continuous training/evaluation) are necessary design levers to build high-performing, transparent, trustworthy, and equitable Human–AI teams.
Prescriptive synthesis from reviewed literatures and conceptual modeling; these principles are proposed heuristics rather than empirically validated interventions in the paper.
low positive Toward a science of human–AI teaming for decision-making: A ... team performance metrics (performance, transparency/trust measures, equity indic...
Embedding AI produces operational gains: automation of routine tasks, fewer errors, faster decision cycles, and continuous model learning/refinement.
Operational claim articulated conceptually with suggested evaluation metrics (forecast accuracy, latency, false positive/negative rates); the paper does not present empirical measurement, sample sizes, or deployment results.
low positive Next-Generation Financial Analytics Frameworks for AI-Enable... error rates, decision latency, automation rate (tasks automated), model performa...
Risk management can accelerate AI adoption by lowering uncertainty for managers and investors, thereby affecting diffusion and productivity gains from AI.
Conceptual implication derived from the review's synthesis and discussion (policy/implication section); not supported by primary empirical testing within the reviewed literature.
low positive The Role of Risk Management as an Organizational Management ... AI adoption rate; diffusion speed; productivity gains from AI
Firms that adopt structured risk management for AI projects can reduce model failure, operational losses, and reputational costs—improving risk-adjusted returns on AI investment.
Theoretical and practical extrapolation from general RM frameworks and thematic findings in the literature; no AI-specific primary empirical studies included in the review.
low positive The Role of Risk Management as an Organizational Management ... model failure rates; operational losses; reputational costs; risk-adjusted retur...
Structured risk management can produce potential cost savings via reduced loss events and more efficient capital allocation.
Reported as a benefit across some reviewed studies and practitioner reports; the review notes lack of primary empirical quantification of effect sizes.
low positive The Role of Risk Management as an Organizational Management ... loss event frequency/severity; cost savings; capital allocation efficiency
Firms that design processes to preserve human diversity and elicit diverse AI outputs may capture greater productivity gains, increasing returns to organizational capability rather than to raw model access.
Theoretical implication and prescriptive recommendation based on observed homogenization; no direct causal firm-level evidence presented, inference based on economic reasoning.
low positive The Artificial Hivemind: Rethinking Work Design and Leadersh... firm-level productivity or returns to organizational capability versus model acc...
Investments to build trust in AI (transparency, reliability, training) are likely to have positive returns via higher adoption rates and realized AI benefits.
This is presented as an implication derived from observed positive associations between trust and outcomes; the study did not conduct cost–benefit or longitudinal causal tests of such investments in the reported analyses.
low positive Algorithmic Trust and Managerial Effectiveness: The Role of ... returns to trust-building investments (adoption rates, realized AI benefits) — i...
Practical levers to increase AI trust include transparency of AI models, demonstrated reliability, and manager-focused AI literacy/training.
Paper proposes these levers based on study findings and discussion (recommendations), but they were not tested experimentally in the reported cross-sectional survey.
low positive Algorithmic Trust and Managerial Effectiveness: The Role of ... AI trust level (proposed interventions to increase trust)
A stronger data-driven decision culture that stems from AI trust yields better operational and academic outcomes.
Study reports positive associations between AI trust → data-driven culture → operational and academic outcomes in survey-based analyses; however, the summary does not specify which operational/academic metrics were measured or sample size.
low positive Algorithmic Trust and Managerial Effectiveness: The Role of ... operational outcomes and academic outcomes (unspecified metrics)
On-Premise RAG provides a viable path for SMEs sensitive to security and cost to adopt advanced language capabilities without perpetual vendor fees or data exposure.
Synthesis of technology, organizational, and environment/security analyses (TOE framework) and implications section arguing SMEs can adopt on-prem RAG; presented as an implication rather than proven adoption data.
low positive An Empirical Study on the Feasibility Analysis of On-Premise... viability/adoptability for SMEs (security- and cost-sensitive adoption)
The dissertation implies policy interventions (subsidies, tax incentives, training and integration assistance) can accelerate welfare-improving AI adoption by helping firms overcome the early negative part of the U-shaped profit profile.
Policy implication derived from the theoretical U-shaped profit relationship and model interpretation; not supported by randomized or quasi-experimental policy evaluation in the provided summary.
low positive MODELING HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM STRATEGIES AI adoption rate and welfare-improving adoption timing
Vendors that embed robust cognitive interlocks into development platforms can command premium pricing by reducing downstream risk; verification features may become a competitive moat.
Market-structure and product-differentiation reasoning in the paper; no market data, pricing studies, or competitive analyses presented.
low positive Overton Framework v1.0: Cognitive Interlocks for Integrity i... vendor pricing premiums; market share attributable to verification features
Human verification (and automated verification infrastructure) becomes the limiting factor and a scarce complement to AI generation, raising demand and wages for verification expertise and tooling.
Theoretical labor-market analysis and complementarity argument in the paper; no labor market data or econometric estimates provided.
low positive Overton Framework v1.0: Cognitive Interlocks for Integrity i... demand for verification roles; wages for verification engineers; availability of...
AI contributes to flatter, more networked and modular organizational forms, with increased cross-functional coordination enabled by shared data platforms and real-time analytics.
Conceptual reasoning supported by cross-sector illustrative examples; no standardized cross-firm comparative empirical study reported in the book.
low positive Modern Management in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Str... organizational structure metrics (hierarchy depth, modularity, cross-functional ...
Valuation of AI services should account for initiation assistance (fixed-cost reduction to starting tasks); monetizable value extends beyond direct task automation and could affect pricing/willingness-to-pay models.
Economic argument and implication drawn from the conceptual model; the paper does not provide empirical willingness-to-pay or pricing studies.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... willingness-to-pay / revenue models capturing initiation value (proposed, not me...
Conversational initiation assistance could complement human labor by increasing worker throughput and engagement, rather than directly substituting for skilled tasks.
Economic/managerial speculation in the paper; no empirical workforce or productivity studies presented.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... worker throughput; worker engagement; substitution vs complementarity (not measu...
Designing interfaces and metrics that focus only on task completion or execution misses value derived from initiation assistance.
Analytic recommendation based on the proposed model; no empirical metric-validation or A/B test results presented.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... product metrics coverage (presence/absence of initiation metrics like task start...
Conversational AI provides a distinct, non-executive mode of value — acting as an action-initiation interface in addition to being a task-execution tool.
Conceptual/economic argumentation in the paper; no empirical valuation or willingness-to-pay estimates provided.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... value derived from initiation assistance (qualitative); not empirically measured...
Iterative conversation with AI surfaces sub-tasks and structures problems (structuring), creating clearer action plans and reducing initiation barriers.
Conceptual argument and illustrative example; paper does not present systematic coding, task analyses, or empirical tests.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... number/clarity of subtasks identified; plan completeness; task initiation
Externalization (expressing frustration/stress to an external interlocutor) reduces affective load and decision paralysis, facilitating task start.
Theoretical reasoning supported by an illustrative anecdote; no empirical measurements or sample-based evidence provided.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... affective load / subjective stress; decision paralysis; task initiation
Verbalization (talking through a problem with the AI) helps users organize thoughts and identify next steps, thereby lowering barriers to action.
Mechanistic argument in the paper; no experimental or observational data reported to validate the mechanism.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... clarity of next steps; action plan emergence; task initiation
The 'Peripheral Approach' — beginning with casual, low-stakes dialogue (complaints, describing where one is stuck) rather than immediately requesting task execution — gradually reduces initiation friction.
Theoretical argument and illustrative anecdote from the author. No controlled studies or quantitative measures presented.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... initiation friction / likelihood of beginning a task; time-to-start
Casual, conversation-style interactions with AI can reduce psychological barriers that prevent people from starting tasks.
Conceptual/theoretical argumentation in the paper; illustrated by an anecdote (author's use of casual AI conversation to begin drafting the paper). No systematic empirical data, no experiments or observational samples reported.
low positive A Model of Action Initiation Barrier Reduction through AI Co... task initiation (probability of starting tasks; time-to-start)
Model and platform providers may capture significant rents through APIs and integrated developer tooling.
Market-structure analysis and observations of current platform monetization strategies; speculative projection based on platform economics.
low positive ChatGPT as a Tool for Programming Assistance and Code Develo... value capture/revenue concentration among model/platform providers
Skill premiums may shift toward workers who can effectively collaborate with AI (prompting, verification, security auditing).
Theoretical and early observational studies suggesting complementary skills add value; limited empirical wage/earnings evidence to date.
low positive ChatGPT as a Tool for Programming Assistance and Code Develo... wage/skill premium for AI-collaboration skills
Computer science curricula should emphasize computational thinking, debugging skills, and verification practices rather than rote coding alone.
Educational implications drawn from studies of learning with LLMs, risks of shallow learning, and expert recommendations; primarily normative and prescriptive rather than experimental proof.
low positive ChatGPT as a Tool for Programming Assistance and Code Develo... curricular emphasis and student competency in verification/debugging (recommende...
Producing occupation × skill × region OAIES scores with uncertainty intervals and scenario modes (conservative/optimistic adoption) will improve decision‑relevant information for policymakers.
Design specification and intended outputs described in the paper; no user testing or policymaker impact evaluation reported.
low positive Enhancing BLS Methodologies for Projecting AI's Impact on Em... OAIES outputs with uncertainty; scenario-based exposure projections
When tasks are well matched to GenAI capabilities, firms can raise output per consultant and reduce time-per-task, thereby changing the marginal productivity of labor in consulting.
Inferred in the implications section from interview-based observations and the TGAIF framework; no reported quantitative measurement of output per consultant or time savings in the study.
low positive Where Automation Meets Augmentation: Balancing the Double-Ed... output per consultant; time-per-task; marginal productivity of labor
Dynamic oversight regimes (ongoing audits, continuous certification) are likely more effective than one-time approvals for managing risks from agentic AI.
Policy and governance argument based on the dynamic nature of agentic systems; presented as a recommendation rather than empirically validated.
low positive Visioning Human-Agentic AI Teaming: Continuity, Tension, and... effectiveness of dynamic oversight vs. one-time approvals in maintaining alignme...
Firms will place greater value on alignment-as-a-service, monitoring platforms, and certification/assurance products as agentic systems proliferate.
Market-structure and demand reasoning from the paper; proposed as an implication rather than empirically demonstrated.
low positive Visioning Human-Agentic AI Teaming: Continuity, Tension, and... market demand/value for alignment/monitoring services
DAR-capable systems that credibly implement transparent registers and controlled reversibility may face lower adoption frictions in high-stakes sectors, affecting market dynamics and insurer/purchaser willingness to pay.
Economics-oriented implication and conjecture in the paper about adoption dynamics and market effects; not empirically tested in the manuscript.
low positive Human–AI Handovers: A Dynamic Authority Reversal Framework f... adoption_rate_in_high-stakes_sectors; insurer_payment_terms; purchaser_willingne...
Demand will increase for complementary goods: orchestration platforms, testing/verification tools, secure code-generation services, and team-level integrations.
Projected market implication based on practitioner-identified frictions (quality, security, integration) in the Netlight study; speculative market prediction without market data.
low positive Rethinking How IT Professionals Build IT Products with Artif... market demand for AI-complementary tools and services
The need to orchestrate AI ensembles increases demand for skills in system design, AI-tooling, and coordination rather than only coding.
Authors' inference based on observed practitioner emphasis on supervision and integration tasks in the Netlight qualitative study; no labor market data provided.
low positive Rethinking How IT Professionals Build IT Products with Artif... demand for complementary skills (system design, AI-tooling, coordination)
First-mover and scale advantages are likely for firms that successfully integrate AI with robust oversight, potentially creating durable cost and service-quality advantages.
Theoretical and strategic analyses aggregated in the review; this is inferential and not supported by longitudinal competitive empirical studies within this paper.
low positive The Effectiveness of ChatGPT in Customer Service and Communi... market share, cost advantage, service-quality differentials attributable to earl...
Platforms combining high-volume generation with effective filtering/curation can create strong network effects and concentration in markets for AI-assisted ideation.
Market-structure reasoning and illustrative platform examples from the literature; no empirical market-wide causal studies reported in the review.
low positive ChatGPT as an Innovative Tool for Idea Generation and Proble... market concentration and network effects for ideation platforms
Firms that embed AI into collaborative workflows and invest in human curation may capture disproportionate returns (first-mover and scale advantages).
Theoretical/strategic argument supported by some applied case evidence and platform-market reasoning cited in the synthesis; the review notes absence of systematic causal firm-level evidence.
low positive ChatGPT as an Innovative Tool for Idea Generation and Proble... firm-level returns, market share, and competitive advantage
Generative AI will create complementarity: increasing returns to skills in evaluation, curation, synthesis, and domain expertise that integrate AI outputs.
Theoretical labor-economics reasoning supported by case studies and task-level studies showing demand for evaluation/curation skills in AI-assisted workflows; direct causal evidence on wage effects is limited in the reviewed literature.
low positive ChatGPT as an Innovative Tool for Idea Generation and Proble... demand for evaluative/curation skills; wage premia for such skills (not directly...
Lowered cost and time of ideation and early-stage R&D due to generative AI may accelerate innovation cycles and reduce firms' search costs.
Inference from studies reporting reduced time-to-prototype and increased ideation; this is an economic interpretation rather than directly measured long-run firm-level innovation rates in the reviewed studies.
low positive ChatGPT as an Innovative Tool for Idea Generation and Proble... time-to-prototype; search costs; firm-level innovation cycle length (largely unm...
Firms must redesign KPIs to capture trust-related externalities (accuracy, escalation rates, repeat contacts) rather than only speed and throughput to avoid perverse incentives.
Recommendation based on observed trade-offs in deployments where emphasis on speed/throughput can harm quality/trust; not supported by randomized tests in the paper.
low positive The Effectiveness of ChatGPT in Customer Service and Communi... KPI design adoption; changes in perverse incentive outcomes (accuracy, repeat co...
Transparency about AI use, seamless escalation to humans, and continuous monitoring/feedback loops are essential mitigations to avoid quality failures and trust erosion.
Governance literature, best-practice case studies, and deployment reports recommending transparency and escalation; limited direct causal evidence on mitigation effectiveness.
low positive The Effectiveness of ChatGPT in Customer Service and Communi... trust indicators; error detection/mitigation rates; successful escalations
Firms that successfully integrate trustworthy, accurate AI can achieve faster strategic pivots and potentially gain competitive advantages and higher returns to organizational capital that embeds AI capabilities.
Associations between perceived trust/accuracy and organizational agility indicators in the quantitative analysis, plus qualitative case-like interview evidence suggesting competitive benefits; explicit causal estimates of returns not provided (implication is inferential).
low positive Human-AI Synergy in Financial Decision-Making: Exploring Tru... strategic pivot speed; competitive advantage; returns to organizational capital