Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/111361
Title: Artificial intelligence in the kitchen: can humans be replaced in recipe creation and food production?
Authors: Kim, H
Choi, S
Shin, HH 
Issue Date: 2025
Source: International journal of contemporary hospitality management, Article publication date: 21 February 2025, ahead-of-print, https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-04-2024-0549
Abstract: Purpose: Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly involved in idea generation and production processes. To understand AI’s pivotal roles in the back-of-house operations of restaurants, this study aims to examine the effects of AI involvement in recipe creation and food production on consumers’ willingness to order food.
Design/methodology/approach: We conduct three experiments in the context of casual dining restaurants. The authors examine the main effect of AI involvement in recipe creation and food production on the willingness to order food in a hypothetical restaurant (Study 1) and a real restaurant (Study 2). In addition, the authors also investigate the mediating role of uniqueness neglect. The authors explore whether the negative effect of AI involvement in recipe creation is attenuated in the presence of cues of uniqueness consideration (Study 3).
Findings: We demonstrate that AI involvement in food production does not elicit negative responses to a menu but that consumers show unfavorable responses when AI is involved in recipe creation. The authors also identify the mediating role of uniqueness neglect. Furthermore, the authors reveal a way to mitigate the negative perceptions of AI involvement in tasks requiring intuition and instinctive decision-making (i.e. recipe creation) by incorporating cues that emphasize uniqueness considerations.
Originality/value: We deliver causal evidence for the significant impacts of AI involvement in recipe creation and food production, using multiple experimental designs involving both hypothetical and real restaurants. The findings, thus, can tackle an ongoing challenge in the tourism and hospitality industry – the deficit of human resources in back-of-house operations.
Keywords: Artificial intelligence
Food production
Objective task
Recipe creation
Restaurant
Subjective task
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Journal: International journal of contemporary hospitality management 
ISSN: 0959-6119
EISSN: 1757-1049
DOI: 10.1108/IJCHM-04-2024-0549
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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