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Evidence (5267 claims)

Adoption
5267 claims
Productivity
4560 claims
Governance
4137 claims
Human-AI Collaboration
3103 claims
Labor Markets
2506 claims
Innovation
2354 claims
Org Design
2340 claims
Skills & Training
1945 claims
Inequality
1322 claims

Evidence Matrix

Claim counts by outcome category and direction of finding.

Outcome Positive Negative Mixed Null Total
Other 378 106 59 455 1007
Governance & Regulation 379 176 116 58 739
Research Productivity 240 96 34 294 668
Organizational Efficiency 370 82 63 35 553
Technology Adoption Rate 296 118 66 29 513
Firm Productivity 277 34 68 10 394
AI Safety & Ethics 117 177 44 24 364
Output Quality 244 61 23 26 354
Market Structure 107 123 85 14 334
Decision Quality 168 74 37 19 301
Fiscal & Macroeconomic 75 52 32 21 187
Employment Level 70 32 74 8 186
Skill Acquisition 89 32 39 9 169
Firm Revenue 96 34 22 152
Innovation Output 106 12 21 11 151
Consumer Welfare 70 30 37 7 144
Regulatory Compliance 52 61 13 3 129
Inequality Measures 24 68 31 4 127
Task Allocation 75 11 29 6 121
Training Effectiveness 55 12 12 16 96
Error Rate 42 48 6 96
Worker Satisfaction 45 32 11 6 94
Task Completion Time 78 5 4 2 89
Wages & Compensation 46 13 19 5 83
Team Performance 44 9 15 7 76
Hiring & Recruitment 39 4 6 3 52
Automation Exposure 18 17 9 5 50
Job Displacement 5 31 12 48
Social Protection 21 10 6 2 39
Developer Productivity 29 3 3 1 36
Worker Turnover 10 12 3 25
Skill Obsolescence 3 19 2 24
Creative Output 15 5 3 1 24
Labor Share of Income 10 4 9 23
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Adoption Remove filter
Cross-country differences in AI effects are driven by digital infrastructure, human capital, and the regulatory environment.
Regression analyses interacting AI adoption with country-level indicators (broadband penetration, tertiary education rates, regulatory indices) and observing systematic variation in estimated productivity impacts.
medium positive S-TCO: A Sustainable Teacher Context Ontology for Educationa... heterogeneity in firm-level productivity gains across countries
Productivity improvements from AI spill over to upstream suppliers in the same value chain.
Input-output linked firm analyses and supplier-customer matched panels showing productivity increases among upstream firms when downstream partners adopt AI; event-study timing consistent with spillovers.
medium positive S-TCO: A Sustainable Teacher Context Ontology for Educationa... productivity of upstream supplier firms (measured output per worker or firm-leve...
AI benefits are greatest where AI adoption is combined with worker training, cloud infrastructure, and managerial changes (complementarity effect).
Interaction analyses in firm-level regressions and stratified comparisons showing larger productivity gains for adopters that also report training programs, cloud adoption, or management practices; robustness checks controlling for firm fixed effects.
medium positive S-TCO: A Sustainable Teacher Context Ontology for Educationa... heterogeneity in firm-level productivity gains conditional on presence of traini...
High-income countries experience larger productivity gains from AI (roughly 8–12%) and faster reallocation toward higher-skilled tasks.
Heterogeneity analysis using country-level indicators (income classification, tertiary education rates) and worker-level linked employer-employee microdata; interaction terms in difference-in-differences and occupation-level event studies.
medium positive S-TCO: A Sustainable Teacher Context Ontology for Educationa... percent change in firm labor productivity and speed of occupational task realloc...
Firms using advanced AI report a 5–12% increase in measured labor productivity within 1–3 years after adoption (average effect).
Panel estimates from multiple country firm-level datasets using difference-in-differences and event-study specifications with 1–3 year post-adoption windows and controls/robustness checks to bound potential selection.
medium positive S-TCO: A Sustainable Teacher Context Ontology for Educationa... percent change in measured labor productivity within 1–3 years
A certification/audit industry is likely to emerge (market for algorithm auditors, explainability tools, compliance software).
Market-outcome inference in the economics implications section; forecast based on anticipated demand for compliance/audit services following white‑box mandates.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research emergence and size of certification/audit firms and related service markets
The protocol projects and systematizes 16 anticipated constitutional rulings by the SCJN to create enforceable standards.
Legal-methodological approach described in the compendium: explicit projection and systematization of 16 anticipated SCJN rulings to derive standards.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research number of projected constitutional rulings (16) and their conversion into enforc...
Greater transparency and audit trails improve regulators’ ability to monitor concentration risks, model commonality and systemic vulnerabilities arising from algorithmic homogenization.
Policy analysis and regulatory design argument in the compendium, drawing on macroprudential principles and comparisons with European regulatory approaches; not empirically tested within the paper.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research regulatory monitoring capacity for concentration risk and systemic vulnerability
Regulatory certainty around rights‑based standards may reorient investment toward explainable AI, compliance tooling, audit services and governance technologies — creating a potential new sector of AI‑economics activity.
Projection based on market response theory and industry trends noted in the compendium; supported by comparative regulatory cases but not by quantified investment data in the paper.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research investment flows into explainable AI, compliance/audit tooling, governance techn...
Localized datasets and mandated disclosure could create public datasets and benchmarks that improve model fairness and enable new entrants.
Policy design proposal and comparative precedent examples in the corpus; normative expectation rather than demonstrated outcome.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research availability of public datasets/benchmarks; model fairness; market entry by new ...
Transparency standards can reduce information asymmetries between firms, borrowers and regulators, potentially lowering adverse‑selection problems in lending markets.
Theoretical economic argument grounded in market microstructure and information economics; supported by comparative regulatory literature in the corpus (no new empirical estimation reported).
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research information asymmetry and adverse selection in lending markets
Non‑discrimination and fairness requirements (procedural standards and substantive tests) must be mandated to prevent biased exclusion in automated credit and financial services.
Doctrinal analysis of jurisprudence and regulatory materials, comparative law review (Mexico ↔ Europe), and review of technical literature on algorithmic fairness in the ~4,200‑text forensic audit.
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research incidence of biased exclusion in credit/financial services (discrimination outco...
A 'White Box' regulatory model — mandatory transparency, explainability, and forensic auditability — should be required for algorithms used in banking/fintech, particularly credit scoring.
Normative protocol design and synthesis of legal, regulatory and technical literature in the forensic audit; policy operationalization component of the compendium (method: doctrinal analysis and normative design).
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research regulatory requirements for algorithmic transparency/explainability/auditability
Digital Sovereignty should be recognized as a fundamental human right protecting citizens’ control over algorithmic decisions affecting economic life.
Normative/doctrinal legal argumentation and comparative law synthesis across the compendium; grounded in rights‑based reasoning and alignment with international human‑rights norms (no experimental/empirical test).
medium positive Diego Saucedo Portillo Sauceport Research legal recognition of 'Digital Sovereignty' as a fundamental right (status/consti...
The governance pattern can lower operational and integration barriers to adopting generative AI and automation, potentially accelerating diffusion across enterprises.
Theoretical and qualitative claim based on synthesis of deployment patterns and case examples; no measured adoption rates or diffusion studies provided.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... adoption/diffusion rate of generative AI and automation within enterprises
AI-specific controls (testing/validation, drift detection, retraining triggers) reduce AI-related risks in enterprise automation.
Paper's prescriptive governance controls and AI risk-management recommendations based on industry practice; described qualitatively without quantitative effect sizes or controlled evaluation.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... reduction in AI-related risk indicators (model errors, drift incidents, unsafe o...
Aligning technical architecture with organizational governance structures (roles, approval workflows, risk committees) and following a lifecycle (design → validation → deployment → monitoring → decommissioning) is necessary for operationalizing automation governance.
Cross-case lessons and organizational integration recommendations derived from multi-sector case examples and best-practice synthesis; presented as prescriptive architecture and lifecycle processes.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... successful operationalization of governance in automation deployments
Embedded governance features (access/data usage policy enforcement, model-output controls), human-in-the-loop checkpoints for high-risk decisions, continuous monitoring, and audit trails increase accountability and provide regulatory evidence.
Normative recommendations grounded in industry best practices and case examples; pattern specification enumerating governance controls. Evidence is qualitative rather than quantitative.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... accountability and availability of regulatory evidence (audit trails, explainabi...
A practical reference pattern combining low-code development, RPA, generative AI, and a centralized governance layer can be deployed in mission-critical ERP/CRM landscapes.
Architectural pattern design and cross-case lessons from multi-sector enterprise implementations; qualitative synthesis of industry best practices and case examples. No large-scale quantitative deployment statistics provided.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... feasibility of deploying an integrated automation pattern in ERP/CRM environment...
Embedding policy enforcement, risk controls, human oversight, and continuous monitoring into the automation lifecycle enables organizations to scale automation while preserving data protection, regulatory compliance, operational stability, and long-term system integrity.
Conceptual framework synthesized from industry best practices and comparative analysis of multi-sector enterprise implementations and case examples; architectural pattern design. Methods: qualitative synthesis and pattern extraction. No randomized or large-sample empirical evaluation reported.
medium positive Governed Hyperautomation for CRM and ERP: A Reference Patter... ability to scale automation while maintaining data protection, regulatory compli...
Design choices that combine transparency and explainable personalization materially increase consumer trust and purchase intention, making them important levers for firms seeking higher conversion in AI-mediated commerce.
Inference drawn from experimental findings showing transparency and empathetic personalization increased trust (and via trust, purchase intention); applied as an implication for firms.
medium positive AI Chatbots as Informatics-Enabled Marketing Service Systems... purchase intention / conversion (inferred from trust effects)
Higher digital literacy weakens (attenuates) the negative link from perceived manipulation to purchase intention.
Moderator analysis in PLS-SEM including measured digital literacy as a moderator of the perceived manipulation → purchase intention path in the experimental sample (UAE, ages 18–25).
medium positive AI Chatbots as Informatics-Enabled Marketing Service Systems... purchase intention (moderated by digital literacy)
Trust is the primary (dominant) mediator through which transparency and empathetic personalization increase purchase intention.
Mediation analysis within PLS-SEM on experimental data (2 × 2 design); measures include trust and purchase intention; indirect paths from design cues to purchase intention were analyzed.
medium positive AI Chatbots as Informatics-Enabled Marketing Service Systems... purchase intention (mediated by trust)
An empathetic, personalized conversational tone in chatbots increases trust among young consumers (UAE, ages 18–25).
2 × 2 between-subjects experiment manipulating conversational tone (empathetic/personalized vs. generic), same sample (UAE, ages 18–25); trust measured; analyzed with PLS-SEM.
Transparent AI identity disclosure increases trust among young consumers (UAE, ages 18–25).
2 × 2 between-subjects experiment manipulating identity disclosure (AI transparent vs. nondisclosed), sample: young consumers in the UAE aged 18–25; trust measured as a dependent variable; effects estimated using PLS-SEM.
Effective regulation can reshape market equilibria by mandating transparency/audits, enabling interoperability/identity portability, constraining high-risk personalization practices, and requiring privacy-preserving measurement standards.
Policy and economic modeling arguments combined with case examples; prescriptive claim based on plausibility and prior regulatory impacts rather than new causal estimates.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... market equilibrium properties (transparency, interoperability, prevalence of hig...
Regulatory interventions (e.g., limits on third-party cookies or profiling) will redirect long-term investments toward privacy-preserving measurement and contextual advertising solutions.
Policy analysis and plausibility argument based on past regulatory changes (cookie deprecation) and industry responses; predictive, not empirically validated within the paper.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... direction of long-term ad-tech investments
Improvements in targeting raise advertiser willingness-to-pay, shifting surplus toward platforms unless competitive pressures or regulation change fee structures.
Economic theory and observed industry trends; no new cross-sectional or panel data regression in this paper to quantify the shift.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... advertiser willingness-to-pay and surplus distribution (platform vs advertisers)
Interpretable models, causal evaluation of impact (not only prediction metrics), privacy-by-design, and governance mechanisms are central to sustainable adoption (resilience criteria).
Recommended evaluation framework based on methodological critique (attribution complexity, metric misalignment) and best-practice literature; no empirical validation sample provided.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... sustainable adoption of AI-driven advertising systems
Long-run viability requires moving beyond raw predictive performance toward resilient, interpretable, policy-aware, and socially legitimate systems.
Normative recommendation grounded in evaluation challenges and literature on trustworthy AI; not an empirically tested hypothesis within the paper.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... long-run viability/durability of ad systems
Regulation shapes incentives for architectures (e.g., favoring first-party data architectures over third-party tracking) (Innovation vs regulatory compliance trade-off).
Policy analysis and observations about industry responses to cookie deprecation and privacy regulation; descriptive industry trend evidence rather than a single empirical trial.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence for Personalized Digital Advertising... investment and architectural choices (first-party vs third-party data adoption)
Complementarities matter: digitalization increases AGTFP more when combined with complementary investments and institutions (mechanization, R&D, cooperative organization).
Findings from mediation analysis and interaction/heterogeneity checks indicating larger effects where complementary inputs/institutions are present.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... AGTFP (conditional on presence of complementary inputs/institutions)
Non-grain-producing provinces experience larger AGTFP gains from digital rural development than major grain-producing provinces.
Comparative sub-sample analysis (non-grain vs. major grain-producing regions) showing larger estimated effects in non-grain-producing areas.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... AGTFP (by crop/region type)
Digital service capacity shows diminishing marginal returns: the marginal positive effect of digital services on AGTFP weakens at more advanced stages of digital-service development.
Panel threshold/modeling of nonlinearity indicating a decreasing marginal effect of the digital service sub-index on AGTFP at higher development levels.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... AGTFP (effect conditional on digital service capacity)
Digitalization accelerates agricultural mechanization and the diffusion of agricultural R&D, which act as channels raising AGTFP.
Mediation analysis including mechanization rate and agricultural R&D input/technology diffusion indicators as mediators; reported significant indirect effects.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... Mechanization rate and agricultural R&D (mediators); AGTFP (outcome)
Digital rural development strengthens cooperative organizational forms (farmer cooperatives), and this organizational upgrading contributes to higher AGTFP.
Mediation tests showing digitalization is associated with greater cooperative organization indicators, which in turn are associated with higher AGTFP.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... Cooperative organization prevalence (mediator) and AGTFP
Digital rural development encourages larger-scale agricultural operations (land consolidation/scale expansion), which contributes to increases in AGTFP.
Mediation models that include farm scale/land transfer indicators as mediators and find significant indirect effects; analysis notes institutional constraints limit full realization.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... Farm scale / land transfer (mediator) and AGTFP
Digital rural development raises AGTFP in part by promoting labor mobility and reallocating labor toward higher-productivity uses.
Mediation analysis using the same provincial panel (2012–2022) showing significant indirect effects through labor reallocation/factor allocation variables.
medium positive Digital rural development and agricultural green total facto... Labor mobility / factor reallocation (mediator) and AGTFP (outcome)
Empirical models of labor costs, productivity, and AI adoption should use total labor cost (wages + NWC) rather than wages alone; CFIL should be included when modeling transitions from informal to formal employment under automation scenarios.
Methodological recommendation based on the magnitude of measured non-wage and formalization costs (2023 estimates for 19 countries) and implications for correctly specifying empirical models; not an empirical test but a suggested best practice.
medium positive Salaried Labor Costs in Latin America and the Caribbean: A T... Accuracy/validity of empirical models of AI adoption and formalization transitio...
Macroeconomic and fiscal gains (GDP growth and increased tax revenues) from platform-enabled productivity are quantitatively estimated via input–output/CGE-style simulations but remain sensitive to assumptions about adoption and policy.
Computed economy-wide estimates from input–output or computable general equilibrium simulations that scale micro productivity improvements; sensitivity analyses run under alternative adoption and policy scenarios.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... estimated change in GDP, regional output, and tax revenues under modeled scenari...
Observed productivity and participation effects are attributable to AI-enabled capabilities using comparative or quasi-experimental contrasts (e.g., before/after rollouts, adopter vs non-adopter, geographic variation in fulfillment infrastructure).
Identification strategy described: comparative/quasi-experimental contrasts across time, sellers, and geographies; robustness and sensitivity checks reported to support causal attribution.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... treatment effect estimates on productivity and participation metrics (e.g., chan...
Algorithmic advertising, dynamic pricing, and demand-forecasting measurably improve ad-targeting outcomes and pricing responsiveness, increasing listing conversions and sales for adopting sellers.
Demand-side algorithmic performance measures (ad-targeting precision/CTR, conversion rates before/after dynamic pricing adoption) and seller sales metrics from platform data and quasi-experimental contrasts.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... ad click-through rate (CTR), conversion rate, average order value, sales per lis...
Platform services and fulfillment-as-a-service reduce fixed costs and complexity of cross-border and domestic sales, lowering market-entry barriers for sellers.
Platform-level service descriptions and seller metric comparisons (seller onboarding rates, cross-border listings, time-to-first-sale) using Amazon FBA case and seller-level data contrasts.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... seller onboarding rate, number of cross-border listings, time-to-first-sale, fix...
Aggregate micro-level productivity gains from platform AI and automated fulfillment translate into higher productivity-driven GDP growth and increased regional economic activity near logistics hubs.
Macroeconomic aggregation using input–output or computable general equilibrium style simulations that scale micro-level productivity changes to economy-wide GDP and regional spillovers; case analysis of regional activity near fulfillment infrastructure.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... GDP (aggregate growth rate change), regional output/employment near logistics hu...
Real-time forecasting and automated warehousing increase supply-chain resilience and responsiveness to shocks (demand spikes, logistics disruptions) through faster replenishment and better buffer management.
Operational logistics and inventory metrics under shock scenarios; comparative/quasi-experimental contrasts across regions and time windows with/without AI-enabled forecasting and automated fulfillment; sensitivity analyses on buffer levels and replenishment times.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... time-to-replenish, stockout incidence, inventory buffer levels, service level (f...
AI capabilities (demand forecasting, dynamic pricing, automated inventory, robotic fulfillment, algorithmic advertising) materially improve fulfillment speed, inventory turnover, and demand-response, raising seller- and platform-level productivity.
Operational warehousing metrics (pick/pack times, robot usage), inventory metrics (turnover rates), demand-side algorithmic performance measures (forecast accuracy, dynamic price responses), and seller performance metrics (conversion rates, sales) in case studies and comparative contrasts.
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... fulfillment speed (order-to-ship times), inventory turnover, forecast accuracy, ...
AI-enabled e-commerce platforms and automated warehousing (exemplified by Amazon FBA) lower entry and transaction costs for sellers, expanding SME market access and scale.
Case-based analysis using Amazon FBA as representative case; platform- and seller-level performance metrics comparing adopters vs non-adopters and before/after feature rollouts (metrics: seller participation rates, listing activity, fees/fulfilment costs).
medium positive Artificial Intelligence–Enabled E-Commerce Systems and Autom... seller entry/participation (number of active sellers), transaction and fulfilmen...
Policy recommendation: invest in targeted upskilling and reskilling, strengthen active labor‑market policies, and design scalable safety nets to mitigate distributional harms of AI.
Synthesis of policy implications and repeated recommendations across the reviewed studies; formulated as actionable guidance in the paper.
medium positive The role of generative artificial intelligence on labor mark... policy interventions aimed at worker outcomes and distributional effects
AI often complements and raises productivity for skilled workers and high-skill tasks.
Synthesis of empirical results from the 17 included studies, several of which report productivity gains or complementary effects when AI is used alongside skilled labor (firm- and task-level analyses reported in the reviewed literature).
medium positive The role of generative artificial intelligence on labor mark... productivity of skilled workers (e.g., output per worker, task-level productivit...
New-skill requirements tend to emerge first and most intensely in the United States.
Cross-country comparison of vacancy-level incidence of new-skill mentions (text-extracted) showing earlier and higher concentration in the U.S. relative to other countries in the sample.
medium positive Bridging Skill Gaps for the Future Timing and intensity (incidence) of new-skill mentions in vacancies by country