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Artificial intelligence
AsiaSoutheast Asia

AI users in Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan more likely to be lonely insomniacs, survey finds

  • A survey of hundreds of workers who use AI, including those in the US, found more loneliness and insomnia and increased after-work alcohol consumption
  • The researchers said they found similar results across all the areas they surveyed, minus the association with alcohol consumption in Indonesia

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The study’s authors surveyed 166 Taiwanese engineers, 126 Indonesian property consultants, 294 Malaysian tech workers and 214 US adults. Photo: Reuters
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People who use artificial intelligence at work are more likely to be lonely and have trouble sleeping than others, according to a new survey of hundreds of workers in Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan and the United States.

“The rapid advancement in AI systems is sparking a new industrial revolution that is reshaping the workplace with many benefits but also some uncharted dangers, including potentially damaging mental and physical impacts for employees,” said Pok Man Tang, assistant professor of management at the University of Georgia.

Tang and colleagues carried out an experiment with 166 engineers at a Taiwanese biomedical company, who were surveyed over three weeks about “feelings of loneliness, attachment anxiety and sense of belonging.”

Rapid advancement in artificial-intelligence systems “is sparking a new industrial revolution that is reshaping the workplace”, the study’s authors said. Photo: Shutterstock
Rapid advancement in artificial-intelligence systems “is sparking a new industrial revolution that is reshaping the workplace”, the study’s authors said. Photo: Shutterstock

“Employees who interacted more frequently with AI systems were more likely to experience loneliness, insomnia and increased after-work alcohol consumption, but also showed some helping behaviours toward fellow employees,” they found.

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A survey of 126 consultants in an Indonesian property management company found much the same, minus the association between the frequency of AI use and after-work alcohol consumption, the researchers said. An online experiment with 214 working adults in the US and another with 294 Malaysian tech company workers produced similar results, they added.

The one upside they found is that people who use AI a lot can prove more helpful to colleagues as their loneliness drives “an increased need for affiliation”.

“Humans are social animals, and isolating work with AI systems may have damaging spillover effects into employees’ personal lives,” Tang said.

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