arXiv:2604.05166v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: AI-based writing assistants are ubiquitous, yet little is known about how users’ mental models shape their use. We examine two types of mental models — functional or related to what the system does, and structural or related to how the system works — and how they affect control behavior — how users request, accept, or edit AI suggestions as they write — and writing outcomes. We primed participants ($N = 48$) with different system descriptions to induce these mental models before asking them to complete a cover letter writing task using a writing assistant that occasionally offered preconfigured ungrammatical suggestions to test whether the mental models affected participants’ critical oversight. We find that while participants in the structural mental model condition demonstrate a better understanding of the system, this can have a backfiring effect: while these participants judged the system as more usable, they also produced letters with more grammatical errors, highlighting a complex relationship between system understanding, trust, and control in contexts that require user oversight of error-prone AI outputs.

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