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Epidemic effects in the diffusion of emerging digital technologies: evidence from artificial intelligence adoption

  • Johannes Dahlke*
  • , Mathias Beck
  • , Jan Kinne
  • , David Lenz
  • , Robert Dehghan
  • , Martin Wörter
  • , Bernd Ebersberger
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

The properties of emerging, digital, general-purpose technologies make it hard to observe their adoption by firms and identify the salient determinants of adoption. However, these aspects are critical since the patterns related to early-stage diffusion establish path-dependencies which have implications for the distribution of the technological opportunities and socio-economic returns linked to these technologies. We focus on the case of artificial intelligence (AI) and train a transformer language model to identify firm-level AI adoption using textual data from over 1.1 million websites and constructing a hyperlink network that includes >380,000 firms in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. We use these data to expand and test epidemic models of inter-firm technology diffusion by integrating the concepts of social capital and network embeddedness. We find that AI adoption is related to three epidemic effect mechanisms: 1) Indirect co-location in industrial and regional hot-spots associated to production of AI knowledge; 2) Direct exposure to sources transmitting deep AI knowledge; 3) Relational embeddedness in the AI knowledge network. The pattern of adoption identified is highly clustered and features a rather closed system of AI adopters which is likely to hinder its broader diffusion. This has implications for policy which should facilitate diffusion beyond localized clusters of expertise. Our findings also point to the need to employ a systemic perspective to investigate the relation between AI adoption and firm performance to identify whether appropriation of the benefits of AI depends on network position and social capital.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104917
JournalResearch policy
Volume53
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • UT-Hybrid-D
  • Epidemic effects
  • Inter-firm diffusion
  • Technology policy
  • Text mining
  • Web data
  • Artificial intelligence

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