ABOUT THIS ISSUE

How was this newsletter synthesized?

Methodology

This newsletter is generated by an AI pipeline (leveraging Anthropic Sonnet 4.5 & Haiku 4.5) that processes the metadata and abstracts of every new arXiv HCI paper from the past week—137 this issue. Each paper is scored on three dimensions: Practice (applicability for practitioners), Research (scientific contribution), and Strategy (industry implications), with scores from 1-5. Papers passing threshold are grouped into topic clusters, and each cluster is summarized to capture what that body of research is exploring.

Selection Criteria

The pipeline builds a curated selection that balances high scores with topic diversity—and deliberately includes at least one 'contrarian' paper that challenges prevailing assumptions. This selection is then analyzed to identify key findings (patterns across multiple papers) and surprises (results that contradict conventional wisdom). A narrative synthesis ties the week's research together under a unifying frame.

Key Themes Discovered

Field Report: ai-interaction

Trust, Agency, and Calibration

This cluster examines how users form, update, and act on beliefs about AI systems during extended interaction. Core tensions emerge: users struggle to calibrate trust appropriately, often losing self-efficacy while delegating authority; they provide sparse, low-quality feedback despite its criticality; and their internal states—self-efficacy, confidence, beliefs—diverge from objective system performance. Research spans collaborative writing, mental health support, autonomous vehicles, and multi-task interfaces, revealing that user experience depends less on what AI does than on how users interpret its capabilities, limitations, and their own role in the partnership.

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