HCCYApr 6

Ghosting the Machine: Stop Calling Human-Agent Relations Parasocial

arXiv:2604.0519755.0h-index: 2
Predicted impact top 27% in HC · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses a conceptual problem for researchers and practitioners in human-AI interaction, clarifying terminology to improve scientific rigor and ethical practices.

The paper argues that labeling human interactions with conversational agents as 'parasocial' is a misapplication of the term, leading to oversimplification and devaluation of human experiences, and calls for recognizing these relations as social.

In discussions of human relations with conversational agents (CAs; e.g., voice assistants, AI companions, some social robots), they are increasingly referred to as parasocial. This is a misapplication of the term, heuristically taken up to mean "unreal." In this provocation, I briefly account for the theoretical trajectory of parasociality and detail why it is inaccurate to apply the notion to human interactions with CAs. In short, "parasocial" refers to a human-character relations that are one-sided, non-dialectical, character-governed, imagined, vicarious, predictable, and low-effort; the term has been co-opted to instead refer to relations that are seen as unreal or invalid. The scientific problematics of this misapplication are nontrivial. They lead to oversimplification of complex phenomena, misspecified variables and misdiagnosed effects, and devaluation of human experiences. Those challenges, in turn, have downstream effects on norms and practice. It is scientifically, practically, and ethically imperative to recognize the sociality of human-agent relations.

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