What to Automate, When, and Why? A concept design to explore Human–AI Teaming in Crisis Management

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59297/57cnkh29

Keywords:

Human-AI Teaming, Levels of Automation, Trust Dynamics, Agent-Based Modelling, Crisis Management

Abstract

Artificial intelligence promises rapid information processing, analysis and decisions. Yet, guidance on what to automate, when, and to what degree, remains limited for Human-AI teams. Case-based empirical studies provide rich context, but a framework for systematic exploration of Human–AI team performance is missing. This paper introduces a conceptual model for Human–AI teaming that integrates levels of automation, trust dynamics, and organizational functions within a social networked, agent based perspective. Building on the crisis information management cycle, it models sensing, analysis, sharing, and decision-making as an iterative loop in which automation shapes latency, reliability, and trust. As a proof of concept, we developed a minimal model with results showing how automation regimes, forecast horizons, and trust configurations affect performance through the concept. The model provides a starting point for users to explore cascading effects, authority shifts, and trade-offs between performance and meaningful human control.

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Published

2026-05-22

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

ISCRAM Proceedings

How to Cite

Dert, T., Balakrishnan, S., Van der Wal, N., & Comes, T. (2026). What to Automate, When, and Why? A concept design to explore Human–AI Teaming in Crisis Management. Proceedings of the International ISCRAM Conference, 23. https://doi.org/10.59297/57cnkh29

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