Abstract

With artificial intelligence (AI) replacing humans at work, creative work is becoming increasingly important for humans. Although AI may improve employees' innovation behavior, some evidence suggests a negative effect through employees' psychological well-being. To address these contradictory arguments, this study investigated the double-edged sword effect of AI-assistant intelligence on employees' innovation behavior based on the transactional model of stress. Two scenario-based experiments reveal that an AI assistant characterized as high intelligence has a positive indirect effect on employees' AI-enabled innovation behavior via creative self-efficacy, while the indirect effect is stronger when organizational AI readiness is higher than when it is lower. However, the same AI assistance has a negative indirect effect on employees’ AI-enabled innovation behavior via STARA awareness when organizational AI readiness is low. These findings have pivotal implications for both management theory and practice.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call