HCAIMay 13

Beyond Anthropomorphism: Exploring the Roles of Perceived Non-humanity and Structural Similarity in Deep Self-Disclosure Toward Generative AI

arXiv:2605.1357427.0
Predicted impact top 66% in HC · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

For researchers studying human-AI interaction, this work identifies psychological factors beyond anthropomorphism that may facilitate self-disclosure, though the findings are associative and exploratory.

This study found that perceived non-humanity and structural similarity are positively associated with deep self-disclosure toward generative AI, with the group high in both perceptions showing 11.35 times higher odds of disclosure than the baseline group.

This study investigates deep self-disclosure toward generative AI by examining perceived non-humanity and structural similarity as psychological factors beyond anthropomorphism. Perceived non-humanity may reduce evaluation apprehension, whereas structural similarity refers to the perceived logical alignment between a user's thinking and AI responses. Using cross-sectional survey data from 2,400 participants collected in 2025, this study analyzed associations with both the occurrence and depth of self-disclosure. Logistic regression indicated that the group high in both perceptions (Segment D) showed a significantly higher likelihood of disclosure than the baseline group (Segment A; OR = 11.35). ANOVA further showed significant between-group differences in disclosure depth. The findings suggest that trust-related behavior in deep self-disclosure may involve factors other than anthropomorphic perception. Because the study is exploratory and based on self-reported survey data, the results should be interpreted as associative rather than causal, and future longitudinal or experimental research is needed.

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