Definition
Anthropomorphism of AI is the human tendency to attribute human traits, emotions, understanding, or intentions to AI systems that do not actually possess them.[1]
At a glance
- It is a perception in the user, not a real capability of the software. A chatbot that says “I understand how you feel” feels no feelings.
- The ELIZA effect: people instinctively trust and bond with anything that converses naturally, even knowing it is a machine.[1]
- Upside for business: a warm, human-like assistant raises engagement, satisfaction, and brand loyalty.[3]
- Downside: it can overstate what your AI can do, encourage over-trust, and expose you to deception or liability claims when customers are misled.[2]
Why it matters for your business
Customers will treat a friendly chatbot as if it understands and cares. That can deepen loyalty, but it also means they may over-share private data, follow bad advice, or feel betrayed when the AI errs.[4] Set clear expectations: disclose it is a bot, avoid implying real empathy or expertise, and keep a human escalation path.
The line between helpful and deceptive
Designing warmth is fine; engineering a false sense of human attachment to drive sales is not. Regulators and researchers flag manipulation, hidden persuasion, and undisclosed AI as growing legal and reputational risks.[2] Disclose the bot’s nature and never let it claim feelings, credentials, or guarantees it does not have.
Bottom line
Anthropomorphism makes AI feel human and persuasive, which can help your customer experience, but treat it as a perception to manage honestly, not a real capability to exploit.