2025-12-13 –, Room03
This study investigates public responses to artificial intelligence (AI) in court-annexed mediation—a setting in which disputing parties retain decision-making authority, unlike adjudication contexts examined in prior research. Using a web-based experiment with 1,000 participants, the study examines reactions to two distinct AI roles: procedural (chatbot mediator) and substantive (AI-generated settlement proposal). Results indicate that initial public skepticism toward AI mediation is significant but diminishes notably after participants engage with the process and review the settlement proposal. Indeed, AI-generated plans were often judged fairer and more accurate than those drafted by humans. Additionally, neither chatbot mediation nor AI-drafted plans significantly affected willingness to accept the plan or satisfaction with the mediation process itself. Transparency strategies also influenced
acceptance: global (generalized) explanations effectively increased acceptance when paired with procedural AI, whereas local (case-specific) explanations backfired with human-authored proposals. Thus, this study suggests that integrating AI into mediation can simultaneously enhance efficiency and legitimacy—provided participants maintain ultimate decision control and transparency approaches align with user expectations.
Hanyang University Law School
Role in the Panel:Paper Presenter