According to Ajzen (1991), the theory of planned behaviour (Ajzen, 1991) has become the most influential model of
predicting human behaviour.
She was talking about «lawyering in the AI age» and touched on «predictive policing» where the computer is used to
predict human behaviour.
John M. Simpson, privacy and technology project director for Consumer Watchdog, complained that «the robot cars can not accurately
predict human behaviour, and the real problem comes in the interaction between humans and the robot vehicles.»
Not exact matches
Now
human resources departments hope to exploit the big data bosses have on their workers, mining calendars and inboxes to
predict employee
behaviour and engineer the exact routines to craft «high performing» employees.
Finding these hominins on an isolated island in Asia, and with elements of modern
human behaviour in tool making and hunting, is truly remarkable and could not have been
predicted by previous discoveries.
It pays to remember
human beings are sometimes irrational, so their economic
behaviour is hard to
predict.