Evidence (11633 claims)
Adoption
7395 claims
Productivity
6507 claims
Governance
5877 claims
Human-AI Collaboration
5157 claims
Innovation
3492 claims
Org Design
3470 claims
Labor Markets
3224 claims
Skills & Training
2608 claims
Inequality
1835 claims
Evidence Matrix
Claim counts by outcome category and direction of finding.
| Outcome | Positive | Negative | Mixed | Null | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Other | 609 | 159 | 77 | 736 | 1615 |
| Governance & Regulation | 664 | 329 | 160 | 99 | 1273 |
| Organizational Efficiency | 624 | 143 | 105 | 70 | 949 |
| Technology Adoption Rate | 502 | 176 | 98 | 78 | 861 |
| Research Productivity | 348 | 109 | 48 | 322 | 836 |
| Output Quality | 391 | 120 | 44 | 40 | 595 |
| Firm Productivity | 385 | 46 | 85 | 17 | 539 |
| Decision Quality | 275 | 143 | 62 | 34 | 521 |
| AI Safety & Ethics | 183 | 241 | 59 | 30 | 517 |
| Market Structure | 152 | 154 | 109 | 20 | 440 |
| Task Allocation | 158 | 50 | 56 | 26 | 295 |
| Innovation Output | 178 | 23 | 38 | 17 | 257 |
| Skill Acquisition | 137 | 52 | 50 | 13 | 252 |
| Fiscal & Macroeconomic | 120 | 64 | 38 | 23 | 252 |
| Employment Level | 93 | 46 | 96 | 12 | 249 |
| Firm Revenue | 130 | 43 | 26 | 3 | 202 |
| Consumer Welfare | 99 | 51 | 40 | 11 | 201 |
| Inequality Measures | 36 | 105 | 40 | 6 | 187 |
| Task Completion Time | 134 | 18 | 6 | 5 | 163 |
| Worker Satisfaction | 79 | 54 | 16 | 11 | 160 |
| Error Rate | 64 | 78 | 8 | 1 | 151 |
| Regulatory Compliance | 69 | 64 | 14 | 3 | 150 |
| Training Effectiveness | 81 | 15 | 13 | 18 | 129 |
| Wages & Compensation | 70 | 25 | 22 | 6 | 123 |
| Team Performance | 74 | 16 | 21 | 9 | 121 |
| Automation Exposure | 41 | 48 | 19 | 9 | 120 |
| Job Displacement | 11 | 71 | 16 | 1 | 99 |
| Developer Productivity | 71 | 14 | 9 | 3 | 98 |
| Hiring & Recruitment | 49 | 7 | 8 | 3 | 67 |
| Social Protection | 26 | 14 | 8 | 2 | 50 |
| Creative Output | 26 | 14 | 6 | 2 | 49 |
| Skill Obsolescence | 5 | 37 | 5 | 1 | 48 |
| Labor Share of Income | 12 | 13 | 12 | — | 37 |
| Worker Turnover | 11 | 12 | — | 3 | 26 |
| Industry | — | — | — | 1 | 1 |
Operationalising the four symbiarchic practices through updated HR systems lets firms capture AI‑enabled productivity gains without eroding trust, ethics or employee well‑being.
Normative claim based on theoretical synthesis and managerial prescription; no empirical testing or field data presented in the paper.
Public data sharing, reproducibility standards, and shared benchmarks could raise the floor of AI utility across the industry.
Policy implication grounded in arguments about data quality, coverage, and generalizability from the narrative review; speculative recommendation rather than evidence-backed empirical claim.
There is potential for consolidation as firms acquire data, talent, or validated AI-driven assets.
Industry-structure implication drawn from economics of complementary assets and observed M&A activity patterns; presented as a likely trend rather than demonstrated empirically in the paper.
AI startups that demonstrate validated, reproducible wet-lab outcomes and access to high-quality data are more likely to command premium valuations.
Argument from observed market behavior and economics of complementary assets presented in the narrative; no systematic valuation analysis included.
Investors should recalibrate expectations: greater value accrues to firms that integrate AI with experimental pipelines and proprietary data assets rather than firms that only possess AI capability.
Economics-focused implications drawn from thematic analysis of heterogeneity in firm outcomes and integration requirements; market-practice inference rather than empirical valuation study.
AI tools complement sensory expertise and design thinking, shifting skill demand toward interdisciplinary competencies (e.g., computational rheology, psychophysics, cultural analytics).
Reasoned inference from technology literature and skill-complementarity theory; literature synthesis but no labor-market empirical analysis provided.
The paper provides a Differentiated Path reference for Emerging Economies to cope with Technological Nationalism.
Claim about the paper's contribution; based on authors' proposed policy framework and recommendations derived from literature review and theoretical analysis; not empirically validated for emerging economies in the excerpt.
The reduction of the AI Model Performance Gap between China and the United States to single digits highlights the new trend of Technology Competition.
Empirical/observational claim stated in the paper; no information in the excerpt about the benchmark metric used for model performance, measurement methodology, time frame, or data sources; 'single digits' not numerically specified.
The research establishes the theory of performance management by developing operational measurement solutions for companies going through workplace redesign due to AI.
Authors claim theoretical contribution and provision of operational measurement solutions based on the proposed three-dimensional model and the empirical patterns observed in the 2022–2024 LinkedIn and Indeed datasets; no external validation or implementation evidence reported in the summary.
By integrating psychological trust factors with cognitive capability optimisation, this model offers actionable insights for knowledge management practitioners implementing AI‑augmented decision systems while advancing theoretical understanding of human–AI collaboration effectiveness.
Integrative theoretical claim based on combining constructs from psychological trust research and cognitive/capability literature via systematic synthesis; no empirical evaluation reported in the abstract.
The framework provides practical guidance for executives designing human–AI teams, developing trust calibration training, and establishing performance metrics.
Prescriptive recommendations derived from the proposed model and literature synthesis; the abstract does not report empirical testing of the recommended interventions or their effects.
Supportive regulatory frameworks and digital infrastructure development are important for leveraging AI technologies to improve global trade efficiency.
Study recommendation derived from empirical findings and discussion; this is a policy implication rather than a directly tested empirical claim (no policy evaluation data provided in the summary).
The study provides empirical support for digital transformation theories within financial intermediation.
Authors interpret quantitative results as empirical evidence consistent with digital transformation theories; specific theoretical tests, model fit statistics, and sample information are not included in the summary.
AI-enhanced compliance systems increased regulatory transparency.
Study reports improvements in regulatory transparency as part of operational efficiency gains attributed to AI-driven compliance systems in the quantitative analysis; precise transparency metrics and sample details not provided.
The system demonstrates 100% alignment with GAAP/IFRS regulatory compliance.
Reported regulatory compliance assessment or stakeholder validation claiming full alignment with GAAP/IFRS. (Summary lacks details on the compliance assessment method, criteria, or independent verification; sample/coverage not specified.)
AI has increased the accuracy of patient selection to 80–90%.
Stated performance range for AI-enabled patient selection in the review. The excerpt does not specify the datasets, evaluation metrics (e.g., accuracy vs. AUC), clinical contexts, or sample sizes used to obtain these numbers.
The practical value of the study lies in outlining an analytical framework that can support the design of adaptive workforce strategies, reduce vulnerability to technological disruption, and strengthen the capacity of economies to respond to ongoing digital change.
Claim about the paper's contribution based on the produced analytical framework; the paper presents the framework but does not report empirical validation or outcome measures from real-world implementations.
Integration of data-driven and AI-supported training tools is a critical component for effective reskilling and upskilling.
Argument based on theoretical analysis and review of practices; the paper recommends integration but does not present empirical performance metrics or randomized evaluations of such tools.
AI-driven ESG analytics strengthened the financial relevance of sustainability integration and supported better-informed investment decision-making.
Study conclusion synthesizing empirical findings (portfolio outperformance and regression results). This is a normative/concluding statement rather than a directly measured outcome; the summary does not quantify decision-making improvements or measure investor behavior.
AI improved the informational efficiency of ESG assessment by capturing more accurate, forward-looking sustainability risks and opportunities.
Interpretation based on the study's empirical portfolio and regression results (better returns, risk metrics, and stronger associations). The claim is inferential; the summary does not report a direct, separate test of 'informational efficiency' or measures of forecast accuracy.
Evidence-based interventions—communication strategies, workload design, capability development, and sustainable human-AI collaboration models—can enhance rather than deplete human cognitive resources.
Paper claims these interventions are identified through synthesis of research; the excerpt does not present direct trial results or quantified effectiveness for these interventions.
The findings have significant implications for policymakers and industry stakeholders in achieving a just transition to sustainable energy.
Concluding interpretation by the paper's authors based on the literature review; no empirical evaluation of policy uptake or impact included in the summary.
There is a growing need for effective policies to mitigate polarization, including re‑skilling initiatives, inclusive hiring practices, and equitable distribution of job opportunities across regions.
Policy recommendation derived from the systematic literature review and synthesis of recent reports/studies; not presented as tested interventions with quantified effects in the summary.
The study contributes to the theoretical advancement of smart supply chain ecosystem frameworks and provides practical insights for organizations seeking sustainable competitive advantage.
Author-stated contribution based on the study's empirical findings and interpretation; this is a scholarly contribution claim rather than a directly measured empirical outcome.
Ecosystem-level integration, governance mechanisms, and workforce readiness are important for maximizing AI-driven transformation in supply chains.
Findings and practical recommendations drawn from the quantitative study and its interpretation; basis appears to be observed associations in the survey data plus authors' discussion—specific empirical tests for governance/workforce readiness effects are not described in the provided text.
The study's implications include policy recommendations to foster responsible AI adoption and data utilization to mitigate economic risks.
Authors extend findings to policy recommendations in the discussion/conclusion of the paper (no specific policy proposals or evaluative evidence provided in the summary).
The research produced a practical framework to guide businesses in effectively leveraging AI and Big Data to navigate market volatility.
The paper's culmination is described as a practical framework derived from its mixed-methods findings (the summary does not provide the framework's components or empirical validation).
The research provides a replicable framework for identifying structural vulnerabilities and designing position-based interventions in construction supply chains.
Authors claim a replicable network-theoretic framework combining interview-based network construction, thematic coding, and centrality analysis to identify vulnerabilities and inform interventions; actual external replication not demonstrated in the paper (per abstract).
Cultural, structural, and decision-making elements co-evolve through recursive feedback loops in human–AI collaboration, advancing process-theoretical understandings of such collaboration.
Analytic interpretation of interview data indicating recursive feedback between cultural norms, structures, and decision routines in AI-integrated startups; presented as an advance to process theory (qualitative evidence; no quantitative test reported).
The study introduces 'hybrid decision architectures' as a dual-level construct that explains how AI triggers systematic organizational change in startups.
Conceptual/theoretical contribution based on synthesis of qualitative interview findings and process-theoretical reasoning (theoretical claim supported by interview data; empirical generalizability not established in excerpt).
A broad-based consumption tax would rebalance a tax system that can no longer depend on taxing individual labor income.
Normative claim in the paper proposing consumption taxation as a corrective mechanism; no empirical evaluation of consumption tax effectiveness included in the excerpt.
In the long term, adopting a broad-based consumption tax should be considered if the share of labor income declines.
Long-term policy recommendation in the paper grounded in theoretical argument about tax base resilience; no empirical scenario analysis or threshold values for 'share of labor income' provided in the excerpt.
In the short term, increasing capital gains rates on the sale of ownership interests in AI-intensive firms would help internalize the distributive imbalances generated by wealth concentration in AI firms.
Policy prescription offered in the paper based on normative reasoning; no empirical simulation, modeling, or estimated revenue/distributional effects provided in the excerpt.
The future of success will not depend on outpacing machines but on cultivating distinctly human capacities: empathy, discernment, imagination and moral reasoning.
Central argumentative claim of the conceptual essay, derived from cross-disciplinary theory (leadership, emotional intelligence, ethics); no empirical validation or sample provided.
Productivity-based definitions of success should be dismantled and reconstructed into a framework centered on adaptability and purpose.
Prescriptive recommendation based on synthesis of leadership theory, emotional intelligence research and AI ethics; presented as theoretical proposal rather than empirically tested intervention.
By mapping trends and gaps in the literature, the study offers guidance for future research and for policymakers navigating AI's economic and regulatory landscape.
Authors' synthesis of topic-modeling results and identified mismatches between research topics and policy priorities; interpretative recommendations provided in the paper.
The study provides actionable insights for managers and policymakers in resource-limited economies regarding factors that influence whether AI adoption translates into performance gains.
Implication derived from empirical results (n=280, PLS-SEM) showing positive main effects of AI adoption and significant moderating roles for financial and technical strengths.
Firms compensate for institutional weaknesses through adaptive and informal mechanisms, allowing AI adoption to yield performance gains despite weak institutions.
Interpretive inference drawn from the non-significant institutional moderation effect in the PLS-SEM and theoretical reasoning (Resource-Based View, Contingency Theory, Institutional Theory); not directly measured as a distinct empirical construct in the reported analysis.
Digitalization strengthens data security and enhances stakeholder trust in audits.
Findings reported from literature synthesis and empirical analysis in the study; specific security measures, metrics, and sample sizes are not reported in the abstract.
Adopting a DARE-inspired approach is not merely a policy option but a societal imperative for aligning technological advancement with the public good.
Normative conclusion asserted in abstract; no empirical validation or stakeholder analysis described in the abstract.
The Philippines has a narrow but real window of opportunity to steer AI adoption toward inclusive upgrading rather than disruptive adjustment.
Synthesis of observed cautious adoption patterns, occupational exposure/complementarity results, and scenario timelines (2025–2035) presented in the paper.
AI would have operated as a cognitive and organizational stabilizer in past industrial contexts, reducing inefficiencies and reinforcing the firm's capacity to adapt, coordinate, and perform.
Interpretation of overall simulation results showing reductions in inefficiencies and improvements across multiple performance measures in the counterfactual AI-HRM scenarios.
AI could optimize coordination between human and technological resources, improving operational coordination.
Model includes workforce allocation and coordination-related variables and uses regression-based simulations to project coordination improvements under AI-driven HR processes.
AI could reduce information asymmetries in performance evaluation.
The paper posits mechanisms and encodes performance-evaluation indicators in the counterfactual model; simulations indicate reduced evaluation-related asymmetries under AI-HRM. (Evidence is model-based; direct empirical measurement of information asymmetry reduction not detailed.)
AI could enhance precision in staffing decisions and improve skill–task matching.
Model specification includes staffing and workforce-allocation variables; simulations portray improved staffing precision and skill–task alignment when HR processes are AI-supported. (This is primarily inferred from modeled mechanisms rather than direct experimental manipulation.)
Policy implications emphasize the importance of well-being-centered education, workforce development, and sustainable growth strategies aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals.
Authors recommend these policy directions based on the study's findings linking emotional/psychological factors to productivity and resilience. This is a prescriptive implication rather than an empirical finding; the excerpt does not provide policy evaluation data.
The helicoid regime is tractable: identifying it, naming it, and understanding its boundary conditions are necessary first steps toward LLMs that remain trustworthy partners in hardest, highest-stakes decisions.
Authors' prescriptive/conceptual claim based on the study's findings and proposed hypotheses; not an empirical result but a recommendation.
Because social protection intrinsically aims to increase equity, there may be an implicit mandate to prioritize women and girls.
Normative/argumentative claim in the introduction linking the equity aims of social protection to a policy implication; no empirical method or data cited in the excerpt.
The paper concludes there is a need for inclusive, transparent, and ethically grounded AI governance capable of balancing innovation, accountability, and human security.
Normative recommendation emerging from the paper's analysis and review of governance paradigms and multilateral initiatives; not empirically tested within the study.
The study contributes to research emphasizing the importance of prompt design in AI governance, multi-agent coordination, and autonomous system reliability.
Stated contribution based on the experimental results and discussion sections; framed as adding to existing literature rather than a discrete empirical finding. (Contribution scope and bibliometric support not provided in the excerpt.)