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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
FROM ANALOG TO ALGORITHM:
a comprehensive review of Artificial Intelligence's
intersection with Management Literature and
Actor-Network Theory
Wellington Rodrigo Monteiro (1), Eduardo Ayrosa (2)
(1) Universidade Positivo, Brasil, wmonteiro@outlook.com
(2) eduardo.ayrosa@up.edu.br
Abstract
In the digital age, the current Management literature remains heavily rooted in anthropocentric and analog
perspectives, often overlooking the profound influence of algorithms and artificial intelligence (AI) in
modern organizational dynamics. To this end, this systematic literature review seeks to bridge this gap by
exploring the evolving landscape of AI in organizations and the role of the Actor-Network Theory (ANT)
as a theoretical-methodological lens for understanding AI’s impact on Management. Through a systematic
literature review, we address research on the utilization of AI in Management over the past decade, the
applications of ANT in non-IT or non-AI management studies, and studies explaining IT or AI concepts
via ANT. Our findings highlight a significant research gap in understanding human-machine interactions
and Business Management within organizations that use AI. Additionally, we identify potential avenues for
future scholarly contributions, emphasizing the need for a more integrated approach that considers human
and machine actors in organizational contexts.
Keywords: Artificial Intelligence; Actor-network Theory; Data Science; Management; Systematic
Literature Review.
2
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
Resumo
Na era digital, a literatura atual sobre Administração continua fortemente enraizada em perspectivas
antropocêntricas e analógicas, muitas vezes negligenciando a profunda influência dos algoritmos e da
inteligência artificial (IA) na dinâmica organizacional moderna. Para isso, esta revisão sistemática de
literatura procura preencher essa lacuna ao explorar o cenário em evolução da IA nas organizações e o papel
da Teoria Ator-Rede (ANT) como uma lente teórico-metodológica para entender o impacto da IA na
Administração. Por meio de uma revisão sistemática da literatura, abordamos pesquisas sobre a utilização
da IA na Administração na última década, as aplicações da ANT em estudos de gestão que não sejam de TI
ou de IA e estudos que expliquem conceitos de TI ou IA por meio da ANT. Nossas descobertas destacam
uma lacuna de pesquisa significativa na compreensão das interações homem-máquina e da Gestão de
Negócios em organizações que usam IA. Além disso, identificamos possíveis caminhos para futuras
contribuições acadêmicas, enfatizando a necessidade de uma abordagem mais integrada que considere os
atores humanos e mecânicos em contextos organizacionais.
Palavras-chave: Inteligência Artificial; Teoria Ator-Rede; Ciência de Dados; Administração; Revisão
Sistemática de Literatura.
1 Introduction
There is a mismatch between the predominantly analog and anthropocentric management
literature and the digital reality of managers permeated by algorithms. The literature on
Management and Strategy commonly treats the organization as a structure mostly comprised of
people working in different departments, areas, and teams. These people have different
backgrounds, training, skills, experiences, and seniorities. According to this literature,
organizations are characterized by rational assumptions of suppliers, competitors, processes,
environments, and hierarchies that are also made up of people and for people.
The literature aimed at executives contributes decisively to creating the archetype of the
executive manager as a human being in his thirties overloaded with work meetings, solving
management problems on a laptop inside the airport while waiting to board another business trip
as his coffee cools. These organizations would, therefore, be led by young, experienced, and
competent executives who make decisions that can be costly, relying mainly on their brains and
instincts. The above description fits an organization from the 1990s or, barring a few minor
adjustments (such as the laptop or the airport), from the end of the 19th century.
That said, the literature that forms the basis of these books and courses is rooted in concepts
and theories from an era that has somehow passed or is passing. Thus, managers of organizations
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
in an era of automation, data, and digitization are trained based on theories incompatible with this
new reality composed of artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms.
These algorithms are commonly trained to generate accurate predictions for applications
throughout the industry. Said algorithms are increasingly important to human lives, such as
deciding whether a loan should be approved, predicting employee turnover, being used in
predictive maintenance applications, and forecasting financial outcomes. The emergence of AI in
practice within organizations causes profound changes in Management (Raisch & Krakowski,
2021). In the past, the domain knowledge owned by managers gave them expert power and status
in organizations however, AI supersedes it with institutionalized knowledge, leading to
institutional action and change (Raisch & Krakowski, 2021).
In fact, Raisch and Krakowski (2021) points out an urgent need for Management scholars
to be more involved in the research and adoption of AI in organizations. AI systems are reshaping
and reconfiguring human-machine interactions and challenging human-centric notions (Borch,
2023).
Despite this urgency, Füller, Hutter, Wahl, Bilgram, and Tekic (2022) notes a gap for future
research to study the role of human-machine interaction in Management. Also, Sarlak,
Salamzadeh, and Farzad (2020) point out that there is a need to plan how AI can be managed
within organizations, and ANT may be a promising approach to achieve that.
Actor-Network Theory (ANT) proposes that non-humans (which includes algorithms) are
also endowed with the capacity to act. Data scientists, technology managers, and other managers
constitute, together with their organization’s AI algorithms, a machine that desires what it does
not yet possess: to predict the future. This desire drives the development of algorithms with better
accuracy than their previous versions, even though the current world has greater unpredictability
in its relationships compared to the past. It makes data scientists test, learn, and implement new
algorithms, techniques, and technical frameworks.
Therefore, this review aims to address the following questions:
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
a) What are the primary research documents (e.g., scientific articles and books) in
Management that deal with using AI in Organizations within the last ten years?
b) What are the leading research documents (e.g., scientific articles and books) that
make use of ANT in areas other than IT or AI and that have been published in the
last ten years but that are related to management studies and have concepts, trends,
or opportunities that can be applied to these areas?
c) What are the main pieces of research (such as scientific articles and books) that
contribute to explaining IT or AI concepts based on ANT that have been published
in the last ten years?
d) What gaps have been identified in this research that could be addressed as future
scientific contributions?
Therefore, the purpose of these research questions is to understand the current research
opportunities and challenges on the study of AI in Organizations through the theoretical-
methodological lens of ANT.
2 Details and Methodology
This section contains information on the methodology adopted in the systematic literature
review. The methodology used in this document is that of Kitchenham and Charters (Kitchenham
& Charters, 2007). This methodology is commonly used in Software Engineering research due to
its particularities, such as the fact that much of the empirical data in this area is proprietary; there
are numerous research methods in the area, and there is less empirical research in this area
compared to Medicine, the area that gave rise to systematic reviews (Kitchenham & Charters,
2007). Although this review does not belong to the research of an exclusive Software Engineering
or Information Technology (IT) research, its context is IT and AI: areas in which experiments are
primarily affected by the human factor and in which concepts such as randomized clinical trials or
blind tests do not exist (Kitchenham & Charters, 2007).
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
The review focused on highly reputable international bibliographic databases for
Management and Technology research: Scopus and Web of Science. As this systematic literature
review aims to understand the recent studies that can be referenced in this document, as well as
the practices and challenges encountered by these studies that are of interest to this research, the
data synthesis stage uses techniques such as keyword analysis, analysis of research over the last
ten years, and maps representing the places that produce the most research that is of interest to this
review.
3 Execution
The research process is characterized by a manual search for dissertations, theses, books,
and articles published in scientific journals or conference proceedings in the last ten years (i.e.,
from 2013 onwards). Considering their relevance, the databases used in the research are Clarivate
Web of Science (WoS) and Scopus by Elsevier.
For all databases, we searched for articles or books published since January 1st, 2013,
containing the following terms in the title, abstract, or keywords: “Actor-Network Theory”;
“Actor-Network Theory” and (“Artificial Intelligence” or “Machine Learning”); “Actor-Network
Theory” and (“Information Technology” or “Algorithm”); “Algorithms” and “Organizations.”
When permitted by the database search engine, we also aimed to use fuzzy search
techniques. For example, instead of “algorithm,” the term “algorith*” can return variations of this
term such as “algorithms,” “algorithmic,” and “algorithmically.”
Furthermore, the following types of results were removed in this review:
a) Scientific articles without peer review.
b) After the first selection of studies, when the number of results found is too high:
keywords belonging to groups unrelated to the research context according to the
co-occurrence analysis.
After applying the inclusion and exclusion criteria, the co-occurrence of keywords in the
selected documents is analyzed using the VOSviewer software (Van Eck & Waltman, 2010),
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
which specializes in constructing and analyzing bibliometric networks. The goal is to find different
groups and correlated search terms.
In addition, to understand research trends, maps and diagrams are also used to understand
the locations and fields of study that produce the most relevant studies, where applicable. The
remaining studies are analyzed individually to understand their relevance, observing the questions
of the systematic literature review. Only the most cited documents will be analyzed according to
the h-index if a search finds a high number of documents.
Finally, the data from the studies that are relevant to the review questions are included in
the document either as qualitative information or within the citation data in order to provide details
such as the name of the study; type of study (such as article or book); year in which it was
published; and observations about the study.
Therefore, this section contains the results found from the search in each database. The
Scopus and WoS databases returned results in English by default, regardless of the language
adopted for each document indexed in these databases. For this reason, searches for these two
databases are standardized in English.
3.1 ANT
The search on the Scopus database (1) resulted in 2,442 documents, of which 1,793
(73.42%) were published in scientific journals, 321 (13.14%) as books, 191 (7.82%) in conference
proceedings, and 137 (5.62%) in book series.
The visualization of the co-occurrence analysis of the keywords chosen by the author
(author keywords) and the indexing of the database (index keywords) according to the VOSviewer
software can be seen in Figure 3. The keyword “actor-network theory” and its variations were not
included to give more detail to the other keywords. For the same reason, the keyword “social
sciences computing,” which appeared very prominently in the analysis in Figure 1, has also been
removed from this second visualization. The result is six large groups: the red cluster (A) highlights
terms related to epistemological and ontological issues related to ANT. In addition, the authors
cited among the keywords are Bruno Latour, Pierre Bourdieu, Graham Harman, and Michel
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
Callon. The green cluster (B) contains terms related to power narratives, public spaces, politics,
and governments. The dark blue cluster (C) has terms close to IT, such as information
management, information systems, information science, and network architecture.
Figure 1 - Co-occurrence analysis for ANT for the search on the Scopus database
Source: the authors
8
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
The yellow cluster (D) also has terms close to social networks and humans’ use of the
internet, such as social media, social interactions, Facebook, e-commerce, and virtual reality. The
light blue cluster (E) has terms close to digital education, such as e-learning, learning technologies,
and educational engineering. Finally, the pink cluster (F) has terms such as crisis, COVID-19,
democracy, and pandemic.
Of these results, English is the predominant language, with 2,207 documents (90.38%). As
for the fields of study, there is a predominance of studies published in the Social Sciences, with
1,566 documents (64.13%). As shown in Table 1, there is also research interest in Business,
Management and Accounting, Computer Science, and Engineering.
Table 1 - Top 10 fields of study in terms of the number of publications on ANT in the Scopus database
Field of Study
Documents
Social Sciences
1,566
Arts and Humanities
670
Business, Management, and Accounting
522
Computer Science
429
Engineering
240
Economics, Econometrics, and Finance
210
Decision Science
143
Mathematics
54
Energy
24
Multidisciplinary
14
Source: the authors
Figure 2 illustrates the production of documents by author and country. The leaders are
English-speaking countries: the United Kingdom (434 entries), the United States (358 entries),
Australia (200 entries) and Canada (151 entries). The list of the ten countries with the most entries
continues with Germany (143 entries), Denmark (127 entries), France (110 entries), Sweden (102
entries), Brazil (93 entries) and Norway (81 entries). As with the first search, this list has more
entries than documents (3,074 entries) since a document can have authors in different countries.
9
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
Of these documents, their relevance is also analyzed based on their citations. As calculated
by Scopus, the h-index for this group of documents is 63 that is, 63 documents have been cited
at least 63 times. Therefore, considering the total number of documents found in the search, only
these 63 documents with the most citations will be considered for the study analysis stage.
Figure 2 - Number of authors per country on ANT in the Scopus database search. Countries with no
production are grayed out
Source: the authors
As with the Scopus database, the same search was carried out on the WoS database. This
search (2) resulted in 1,069 documents, of which 894 (80.26%) were published in scientific
journals, 171 (16.00%) in conference proceedings, and 4 (3.74%) as book chapters.
A visualization of the co-occurrence analysis is shown in Figure 3. Six groups of keywords
stand out. The red cluster (A) contains terms specific to organizations, such as “strategy,”
“business,” “performance,” “management,” and “corporation.” The green cluster (B), in turn,
includes sociological aspects such as “power,” “materiality,” “agency,” and “culture.” The dark
blue cluster (C) includes IT-related terms such as algorithms,” “technology,” “innovation,”
“information,” and artificial intelligence.” The yellow cluster (D), in turn, includes terms close to
consumption, such as “consumers,” “experience,” “things” and “users.” The light blue cluster (E)
includes terms close to the economy, such as “markets,” “competition,” and “economy.” Finally,
10
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
the pink cluster (F) includes terms such as “crisis,” “COVID-19,” “entrepreneurship,” “markets”
and “uncertainty.”
Figure 3 - Co-occurrence analysis for ANT for the search on the WoS database
Source: the authors
There is still a predominance of English in this second search, with 986 documents
(92.24%). In terms of fields of study, areas such as Management and Economics, Sociology, and
Computer Science lead the way in terms of the number of documents, according to Table 2. There
11
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
are also areas such as Information Science and Library Science (82 documents) and Engineering
(66 documents).
Table 2 - Top 10 fields of study in terms of the number of publications on ANT in the WoS database
Field of Study
Documents
Management and Economics
399
Sociology
226
Computer Science
168
Social Sciences – Other Topics
167
Communication
126
Information Science and Library Science
82
Engineering
66
Public Management
29
Government Law
25
Environmental Studies and Ecology
23
Source: the authors
As for publications by country, Figure 4 shows that English-speaking countries continue
to predominate. The ten countries with the most contributions in this second search are the United
Kingdom (235 entries), the United States (144 entries), Australia (96 entries), France (67 entries),
Canada (65 entries), Denmark (64 entries), Brazil (57 entries), China (56 entries), the Netherlands
(47 entries) and Germany (47 entries).
12
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
Figure 4 - Number of authors per country on ANT in the WoS database search. Countries with no
production are grayed out
Source: the authors
Furthermore, as calculated by the WoS algorithm, the h-index of this group of documents
is 47. In other words, 47 documents were cited at least 47 times. As many documents were found
in the search, only these 47 documents will be considered for the analysis stage of the studies.
3.2 ANT and AI
Another search on the Scopus and WoS databases aimed to find all documents explicitly
mentioning ANT and AI (or machine learning (ML)). Thus, the terms “artificial intelligence” and
“machine learning” were included in the search.
Considering the Scopus database (3), 48 documents were found. Of these, 27 were
published in scientific journals (56.25%), 9 in book series (18.75%), 8 in books (16.66%), and 4
in conference proceedings (8.33%). Most were written in English (42 documents, or 87.50%). The
remaining documents were published in Portuguese (2 documents), Russian (2 documents), Czech
(1 document), and German (1 document). Considering the areas of study, most studies are in
Computer Science, Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities, and Business, Management, and
Accounting.
13
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
The WoS database search (4) had returned a total of 38 documents. Of these documents,
29 were published in scientific journals (76.32%) and 9 in conference proceedings (23.68%).
Concerning the language of the publications, the vast majority were in English (34 documents, or
89.47%). The remaining documents were published in Russian (2 documents), Bulgarian (1
document) and Czech (1 document).
As for the fields of study, 12 documents belong to the area of Computer Science, four to
the area of Education, and three to each of the following areas: Control and Automation Systems,
Management and Economics, Engineering, and Social Sciences Other Topics. Literature and
Philosophy have two documents each.
Since the number of documents found was low, all the documents found in both searches
were further analyzed without relying on the h-index.
3.3 ANT and IT
As with AI, another search was conducted in both databases to find all documents
containing keywords related to ANT and IT. The search terms used for IT included “algorith*,”
“information technolog*, “information theor*,” and “information system*.” Thus, 371 results
were found for the Scopus database search (5). Of this group of documents, 218 (58.76%) are
articles in scientific journals, 77 (20.75%) are articles published in conference proceedings, 51
(13.75%) are part of book series, and 25 (6.74%) are books.
Figure 5 illustrates the keyword co-occurrence analysis using the VOSviewer software
(Van Eck & Waltman, 2010). This analysis considers the keywords chosen by the author (author
keywords) and by indexing the database (index keywords). The keyword “actor-network theory”
and its variations were not included to give more detail to the other keywords. The same applies
to the term “social sciences computing.” The cluster in red (A) addresses keywords related to
Computer Science concepts such as “algorithms,” “big data,” “human-computer interaction,” and
“computer theory.The cluster in green (B) includes items related to the discipline of Software
Engineering with terms such as “project management,” “information systems,” and “case study.”
The dark blue cluster (C), on the other hand, deals with the use of IT in societal applications with
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
terms such as “e-government,” “societies and institutions,” and “education.” The yellow cluster
(D) is characterized by keywords related to the socio-technical aspect of Computing. The light
blue cluster (E) addresses the implementation and dissemination of IT use with terms such as
“technology adoption” and “decision-making.” Finally, the pink cluster (F) addresses terms related
to people’s use of the internet by having terms such as “social media,” “e-commerce,” and
“information and communication.”
Figure 5 - Co-occurrence analysis for ANT and IT for the search on the Scopus database
Source: the authors
15
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
From these results, the predominance of English is repeated with its use in 353 documents
(95.15%). Regarding fields of study, Social Sciences and Computer Science share the most
extensive number of published studies, with 178 documents each. The total number of documents
per area exceeds 353 since a study can be in more than one area. A summary of the main fields of
study is shown in Table 3.
Table 3 - Top 10 fields of study in terms of the number of publications on ANT and IT in the Scopus
database
Field of Study
Documents
Computer Science; Social Sciences
178
Business, Management, and Accounting
84
Decision Science
64
Engineering
46
Arts and Humanities
39
Economics, Econometrics, and Finance
26
Mathematics
21
Materials Science; Energy
5
Multidisciplinary
3
Physics and Astronomy; Chemistry
2
Source: the authors
The ten countries with the most entries are the United Kingdom (53 entries), Australia (43
entries), the United States (35 entries), Brazil (27 entries), South Africa (26 entries), Canada (20
entries), France (19 entries), Germany (17 entries), Sweden (15 entries) and Denmark (12 entries).
As with other searches, there are more entries (a total of 453 entries) than documents in this list
because there are more authors than documents. In addition, according to the Scopus tools, the h-
index for this set of documents is 31. Therefore, the 31 most cited documents will be further
analyzed in more detail.
The same search also took place on the WoS database (6). This search returned 298 results.
Of these, 206 are articles in scientific journals (69.12%), 91 are articles published in conference
proceedings (30.54%), and 1 document is a book chapter (0.34%). In addition, 284 of these
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
documents were published in English (95.30%), 5 in Portuguese (1.68%), 5 in Russian (1.68%), 2
in French (0.67%), 1 in German (0.34%) and 1 in Spanish (0.34%).
Table 4 highlights the main fields of study for these documents. The main areas are
Computer Science (112 documents, or 37.58%), Management and Economics (74 documents, or
24.83%), and Information Science and Library Science (66 documents, or 22.15%). According to
the WoS tools, the h-index for this set of documents is 27. Therefore, considering this research’s
total number of documents, only 27 will be used in the analysis phase.
Table 4 - Top 10 fields of study in terms of the number of publications on ANT and IT in the WoS
database
Field of Study
Documents
Computer Science
112
Management and Economics
74
Information Science and Library Science
66
Communication
34
Engineering
33
Sociology
26
Social Sciences – Other Topics
21
Control and Automation Systems
14
Telecommunications
14
Development Studies
6
Source: the authors
3.4 Management and AI
A final set of database searches were conducted to understand how AI algorithms are
studied within organizations. The search, therefore, included the keyword “organization” and its
variations (examples: “organization,” “organizations,” and “organizations”) together with the
keywords “artificial intelligence” or “machine learning.”
As in other cases, this search was limited to books, book series, and articles published in
conference proceedings or scientific journals, regardless of language. Ninety documents were
found in the Scopus search (7). Of these, 72 (80.00%) are articles in scientific journals, 7 (7.78%)
17
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
are books, 7 (7.78%) are articles published in conference proceedings and 4 (4.44%) are part of
book series. Once again, there was a predominance of materials produced in English, with 85
documents (94.45%). In addition, two documents were published in Spanish (2.22%), 1 in French
(1.11%), 1 in German (1.11%), and 1 in Ukrainian (1.11%). There were no publications in
Portuguese.
Figure 6 shows the contribution by author and country. The top ten countries are United
Kingdom (22 entries), Germany (12 entries), China (10 entries), India (7 entries), France (6
entries), United States (6 entries), Finland (4 entries), Australia (4 entries), Sweden (3 entries), and
Russia (3 entries). There are a total of 135 entries for the 90 documents. According to the Scopus
tools, the h-index for this set of documents is 16. Therefore, the 16 most cited documents will be
used to analyze the studies.
Figure 6 - Number of authors per country on Management and AI in the Scopus database search.
Countries with no production are grayed out
Source: the authors
On the other hand, the WoS database search (9) had returned a total of 216 documents, of
which 200 were articles published in scientific journals (92.60%), and 16 were published in
conference proceedings (7.40%). In addition, 215 of these documents were published in English
(99.53%) and 1 in Russian (0.46%).
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
The co-occurrence analysis of the keywords of these documents generated with the
VOSviewer software (Van Eck & Waltman, 2010) can be seen in Figure 7. A total of four groups
were identified: The red cluster (A) has keywords related to Management and AI, such as
“technology,” “adoption,” and implementation.” The green cluster (B) includes words related to
data analysis in an organization, such as knowledge management,” “analytics,” and
“performance.” The blue cluster (C) has keywords related to data areas, such as “big data,”
“machine learning, and “data science.” Finally, the yellow cluster (D) includes keywords such as
“innovation,” “knowledge,” and “service.”
Figure 7 - Co-occurrence analysis for Management and AI for the search on the WoS database
Source: the authors
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
Considering the countries and out of 356 entries, 55 were from the United States, 43 from
the United Kingdom, 27 from France, 21 from India, 21 from Germany, 21 from Australia, 17
from Italy, 15 from China, 10 from the Netherlands, and nine from Canada. According to the WoS
tool, the h-index for this set of documents is 36. Therefore, considering this research’s total number
of documents, only 36 will be used in the analysis phase.
4 Study Analysis and Synthesis
The goal of this section is to investigate the relevance of the documents found in the past
section to answer the questions in the systematic literature review.
4.1 AI in Organizations
Using big data and analytical intelligence solutions (such as ML and AI) in an organization
is strongly related to gaining a competitive advantage over its competitors (Akhtar, Frynas,
Mellahi, & Ullah, 2019). In this case, these technologies allow for expanding an organization’s
operations and discovering new business opportunities (Akhtar et al., 2019). For example, in
manufacturing organizations, using AI algorithms brings more flexibility to strategies and reduces
the risks of interruptions in the supply chain (Bag, Pretorius, Gupta, & Dwivedi, 2021). In addition,
companies that offer products in a digital platform format with AI algorithms demonstrate a
network effect (Gregory, Henfridsson, Kaganer, & Kyriakou, 2021). Organizations such as Uber,
Google, Apple, Tesla, and Netflix are cases where consumers perceive greater value the more data
they have, and the more improvements are made to these platforms through AI (Gregory et al.,
2021).
The adoption of AI in organizations is not only a technological innovation but also an
innovation in organizations’ business models (Armour & Sako, 2020; Raisch & Krakowski, 2021).
AI and disruptive technologies enable new challenges and entrants into an industry, promoting
organizational strategies based on co-creation between consumers and companies (Buhalis et al.,
2019). On the other hand, incumbent organizations in traditional industries also make use of the
diffusion of IT techniques and AI and ML algorithms through the “digital transformation”
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
movement: an action that depends on the strategic renewal of an organization’s business model or
how collaboration takes place within it (Warner & Waeger, 2019).
On the other hand, the use of AI in organizations also poses challenges (Armour & Sako,
2020; Borch, 2023). They point out that, given the ethical challenges related to the use of AI,
analysts in business areas need to be more hybrid that is, to have technical skills in addition to
their original specialization. For this reason, using AI algorithms also requires additional
investment in worker training and IT infrastructure resilience (Bag et al., 2021). Despite this
potential, many traditional organizations remain reluctant to invest, perpetuating a cost-cutting
mentality of manufacturing organizations from the previous century (Bag et al., 2021).
From the point of view of workers (Brougham & Haar, 2018) aimed to understand their
perception of the potential impact of AI and other disruptive technologies on their jobs and careers.
The authors note that workers generally understand that these technologies can affect their jobs
but not necessarily that there is a threat per se to their adoption in organizations.
Although some studies did not focus on AI, comparisons can be applied to this context. For
example, Andersen, Danholt, Halskov, Hansen, and Lauritsen (2015) studied the participatory
design process of an IT system. In participatory design, many actors exist, such as drawings,
statistics, reports, and interested people. In AI, there are participants such as algorithms, databases,
integration systems, and stakeholders.
In the context of Engineering, Burga and Rezania (2017) study a renovation project for a
university building using ANT as a theoretical-methodological approach. Actors such as the
project committee, architects, outsourced teams, and the construction are part of this network. In
this study, the concept of “responsibility” was shared between the actors and understood
differently. Similarly, IT projects have different actors, such as developers, managers, outsourced
teams (consultancies), and systems.
In management accounting, Cooper, Ezzamel, and Qu (2017) use ANT to explore how the
balanced scorecard technique has moved from a technique in this area to a general management
practice. The article illustrates how this technique has become a practice over time and space and
notes how management ideas and techniques are transformed and reconstructed by managers,
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
consultants, and scholars. Likewise, AI within organizations has been transformed, redefined, and
reconstructed by technicians, managers, consultants, and scholars.
4.2 ANT in Organizations
In addition to the examples mentioned above (Burga & Rezania, 2017; Cooper et al., 2017),
ANT has shown itself to be a versatile theoretical-methodological approach (Piekut, 2014) in a
myriad of studies in recent years involving organizational departments or organizations in a variety
of sectors. Examples include: Law (Armour & Sako, 2020); Hospitality and Customer Service
(Belanche, Casalo, Flavian, & Schepers, 2020); Human Resources (Dery, Hall, Wailes, & Wiblen,
2013; Pan, Froese, Liu, Hu, & Ye, 2022; Pillai & Sivathanu, 2020); IT (Cecez-Kecmanovic, Kautz,
& Abrahall, 2014; Dery et al., 2013; Elbanna, 2013; Fleming, 2019; Pollack, Costello, & Sankaran,
2013; Prado & Calani Baranauskas, 2014; Williams, 2020); Financial Governance (Campbell-
Verduyn, Goguen, & Porter, 2017); Organizational Performance (Caputo, Cillo, Candelo, & Liu,
2019); Health (Greenhalgh et al., 2019; Pinto et al., 2022); Manufacturing (Kaasinen et al., 2022),
and Accounting (Modell, Vinnari, & Lukka, 2017).
Among qualitative methods, ANT has also historically been combined with
autoethnography in various studies on organizations (Alonso Trillo & Poliks, 2023; Bartrolí, 2021;
Cecez-Kecmanovic et al., 2014). It has also been combined with ethnography in other studies
(Andersen et al., 2015; Bartlett & Vavrus, 2014; Eze, Duan, & Chen, 2014; Greenhalgh et al.,
2019; Lawrence & Dover, 2015; Martin & Schouten, 2014; Prado & Calani Baranauskas, 2014;
Sidorova, 2018; Warner & Waeger, 2019).
The choice of ANT as a theoretical-methodological approach by different organizational
studies is mainly due to its flexibility and symmetry between human and non-human actors. It is,
for example, effective for developing research focusing on building models and theories (Pollack
et al., 2013).
ANT also makes it possible to trace the flow of interests and the stabilization of power
relations in a network of heterogeneous actors by granting the same importance at the social level
to all of them be they human or non-human (Bellanova, 2017; Prado & Calani Baranauskas,
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
2014). In addition, Modell et al. (2017) note that ANT can enrich the analysis of institutional
change by better understanding the dynamic nature of power relationships and the changing
meaning of practices.
In the case of IT projects, Dery et al. (2013) point out that the ANT enables a better
understanding of the progress of implementing these projects. Martin and Schouten (2014)
highlight the potential of using ANT in market dynamics studies. In addition, Flyverbom (2015)
argues that he used ANT to make fuzzy concepts (such as transparency) tangible in operational
and material problems. Waeraas and Nielsen (2016) have analyzed the use of ANT for
organizational research and point out that its usefulness for understanding the processes of
knowledge translation lies in the fact that it makes it possible to add a political dimension to
mediate practices.
That said, Gunawong and Gao (2017) note that in order to exploit the benefits of this
approach entirely, it is necessary to choose a case that represents the four “moments” of translation
(problematization, interéssement, inscription, and mobilization).
Considering AI, Sarlak et al. (2020) point out that ANT can be a good guide for planning
how to manage AI within organizations. In addition, van Rijmenam and Logue (2021) explore the
understanding of AI agency in organizations. The authors point out that, like other technologies,
AI also challenges organizational theories. More specifically, it challenges the notions of agency,
structure, materiality, authorship, and intentionality. Furthermore, ANT allows for analyzing
human and non-human agents in the same context without a presupposed hierarchy.
4.3 ANT and IT in Organizations
ANT has also been chosen as a theoretical-methodological approach by studies over the
last ten years to analyze organizations’ IT, AI, and ML cases. Borch (2023) highlights ANT’s
potential to analyze ML systems because it allows us to demonstrate the distribution of human
agency in an actor-network with non-human actors. In addition, the development phase of new
ML algorithms in an organization can also be studied as part of this same actor-network (Borch,
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
2023). There is also the potential of using ANT to understand the joint agency between humans
and AI in organizations (Murray, Rhymer, & Sirmon, 2021).
Within the area of Financial Governance, Campbell-Verduyn et al. (2017) use ANT to
understand the contrast between utopian and dystopian visions of the future of the use of big data
and ML in this context. The article presents a myriad of actors, such as large financial companies,
search engines, government agencies, members of civil society, credit bureau algorithms, and other
credit ML algorithms.
From the point of view of Organizational Performance, Caputo et al. (2019) investigate the
relationship between AI and humans to increase organizational performance. The study highlights
that, prior to this research, contributions in the field of Management were focused on the
opportunities and processes of AI in organizations rather than on the impact or relationships with
humans in these organizations.
In industrial organizations, Kaasinen et al. (2022) used ANT to explore the interaction of
teams of humans, robots, and AI in factory operations. On the other hand, Johnson and Verdicchio
(2019) studied the case of emissions fraud in a German car industry to explain the agency of AI
algorithms.
In the area of health, Pinto et al. (2022) used ANT to analyze the social barriers to using
AI in the area of health specifically, for the prediction of seizures. The authors point out that out
of skepticism and for safety reasons, many authors prefer to use intrinsically explainable models
for AI in this scenario, even though this diminishes the potential and performance of AI.
Considering IT projects, Cecez-Kecmanovic et al. (2014) used ANT to understand how the
concepts of success and failure of IT projects are created and sustained in practice. This research
highlighted numerous actors in an organization’s IT project, such as human teams, software, IT
equipment, and managers. Similarly, Sidorova (2018) used ANT to understand the relationship
between computer vision ML algorithms, devices, and users.
Also, Elbanna (2013) adopted ANT to bring a more contextualized understanding of the
role of support from an organization’s top management in the success of IT projects precisely,
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
in a scenario where multiple projects are executed simultaneously. As for small and medium-sized
companies, Eze et al. (2014) studied IT adoption in these locations using ANT. The study showed
that this adoption is a dynamic, interactive, and ongoing process. In the public sector, Gunawong
and Gao (2017) adopted ANT to study e-government project failure in Thailand, and Missonier
and Loufrani-Fedida (2014); Sperling, Stenliden, Nissen, and Heintz (2022) investigated IT and
ML projects in the field of Education in France and Sweden, respectively. Both studies also
adopted ANT as their theoretical-methodological approach.
Pollack et al. (2013) applied ANT to understand the implementation of an IT system for
project management. The authors point out that the positive impact of this project was not only
due to the software itself but also to a network of associations between researchers and users.
Similarly, Prado and Calani Baranauskas (2014) used ANT to analyze the social forces involved
in organizational changes when following an IT team at a public university in Brazil.
As for work within organizations, Dery et al. (2013) investigated the relationship between
workers in the Human Resources area of an organization and the implementation of an IT system
for this area from the perspective of the ANT. The authors point out that the ANT allows a better
understanding of the progress of IT project implementations and that there is a need for non-IT
scholars (in this case, Human Resources) to have more contact with the literature and
contemporary concepts in this area. Pan et al. (2022); Pillai and Sivathanu (2020) analyzed the
adoption of AI algorithms for hiring workers.
More broadly, Fleming (2019) addressed the discussion on the impact of robotics and AI
on the future of work. The author seeks to demonstrate how organizational forces shape the
application of technology to employability. Flyverbom (2015) adopted ANT to analyze the ideals
of transparency in the digital domain and within organizations. In addition, Hansen and Flyverbom
(2015) used the ANT to analyze the work of human actors and algorithms in producing
transparency in organizations.
Studies have also sought to use ANT to understand better IT and AI interactions with
humans outside of a specific organization, but rather in areas that span more than one organization.
Examples include the analysis of digital mapping algorithms (Bittner, Glasze, & Turk, 2013),
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
border control (Andersson, 2016; Martin & Schouten, 2014), justice management (Contini, 2020),
blockchains and cryptocurrencies (Islam, Mantymaki, & Turunen, 2019), health (Karmakar,
2022), digital media (Kumar & Rangaswamy, 2013), education (Sperling et al., 2022), and music
(Alonso Trillo & Poliks, 2023).
5 Identified Research Gaps and Opportunities
As such, a plethora of research opportunities can be observed in the context of this
systematic literature review. Borch (2023) emphasizes that seriously taking these challenges
should be a critical task for sociological theory in the coming years. These opportunities include:
a) Ethical challenges: Armour and Sako (2020) highlighted the opportunity for future
studies to address the ethical challenges of using AI in applications that directly
influence people’s lives, such as law.
b) Transformative potential: Borch (2023) notes a sociological interest in AI that
has yet to be explored for its potential to transform subjectivity, organizations, and
society. Also, Sarlak et al. (2020) note that in the field of Management, there needs
to be more research to investigate the link between humans, AI, thoughts, values,
resources, and other organizational entities. van Rijmenam and Logue (2021) note
opportunities for studies in institutional theories to theorize the agency of AI,
including as an actor. In addition, van Rijmenam and Logue (2021) comment that
there is the potential for a revised organizational science for a coming era in which
AI will be more autonomous and separate from the social, potentially behaving
differently from humans.
c) Organizational changes brought by AI: Borch (2023) note a gap for future
research to under-stand how expertise is reconfigured in areas such as Medicine or
Finance, where ML systems are gaining ground and potentially challenging existing
forms of specialization in these areas. In addition, Dery et al. (2013) comment that
there is a need for scholars in non-technology fields (and, by extension, AI and ML)
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
to have more significant contact with contemporary literature and concepts in this
area. Raisch and Krakowski (2021) also point out that Management studies need to
be involved in the research and use of AI in organizations. The authors suggest, for
example, analyzing how AI solutions change the role of managers in organizations.
Previously, there was an emphasis on managers’ domain knowledge, which gives
them expert power and status in organizations. At a higher level, Raisch and
Krakowski (2021) also suggest exploring how the emergence of AI and automation
in Management leads to institutional action and change. The authors highlight that
future research should study how broad networks of heterogeneous actors organize
collective action to address problems related to the use of AI in Management. Borch
(2023) also notes a gap for future research to understand the reshaping between
human-machine interactions when machines have greater autonomy in decision-
making. Lee and Bjorklund Larsen (2019) highlight that future research can show¨
how algorithms dynamically combine and reconfigure different social and material
heterogeneities by analyzing the operations of connecting data and other actors with
algorithms.
d) Relationship with consumers: Buhalis et al. (2019) highlight the opportunity for
future re-search to explore how the prospecting of new technologies affects the
customers who use the services and that, to a certain extent, they test these
technologies for the benefit of the companies. Buhalis et al. (2019) also suggest that
future studies seek to address how organizations can balance the strategies of
exploitation (using the size of an organization’s digital platform to test new features
and create network effects) and exploration (using the popularity and familiarity of
an organization’s products to spread more products).
e) Impacts of AI in different areas: Campbell-Verduyn et al. (2017) highlight an
opportunity for future research to investigate the impacts of AI algorithms and big
data on other governance practices, industries, and other areas of organizational
study.
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
f) Governance practices and AI: Campbell-Verduyn et al. (2017) also suggest
examining the sources and systems of data ingestion for AI algorithms and the
composition of the places in which algorithms and humans interact. According to
the authors, this brings opportunities to understand how algorithms and the use of
big data influence and transform contemporary governance practices. van
Rijmenam and Logue (2021) also highlight the opportunity for future research to
understand how AI algorithms make decisions to resolve conflicts and avoid
uncertainty or how these algorithms change the nature of organizational design,
strategy, power, and governance.
g) Organizational performance and AI: Caputo et al. (2019) highlight the need to
investigate in depth the relationships between humans, organizational processes,
and AI to make the most of the opportunities of this technology for organizational
performance. Eze et al. (2014) note the possibility of examining and understanding
the relationship between the advancement of IT and human actors in an
organization specifically, how actors influence and are influenced by the
development of technologies for the organization’s performance and competitive
advantage. Gregory et al. (2021) highlight the opportunity to understand the
relationship between the use of AI and the effects of data networks on the
competitive advantage of organizations with platforms offering AI services. Murray
et al. (2021) highlight the need for more analyses, theories, and philosophical
discussions on the interface between humans and AI in organizations especially
qualitatively. Thus, the authors suggest that future studies seek to understand how
the joint agency between humans and AI impacts organizational routines from a
time perspective. Warner and Waeger (2019) emphasize an opportunity for future
studies to explore the temporal role that digital transformation characterized by
the diffusion of IT techniques and AI and ML algorithms plays in maintaining
transient competitive advantage.
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
h) Studies with multiple IT projects: Elbanna (2013) highlight a need for more
research into environments with multiple IT projects in organizations since most
studies focus on a single project.
i) Work and AI: Fleming (2019) suggests that organizational studies contribute to
broadening debates within public issues, such as the decentralization of the
institution of work so that people are not so defenseless against changes in the job
market brought about by the adverse effects brought about by the adoption of AI in
organizations. Füller et al. (2022); Pan et al.¨ (2022) highlight a need for future
research to understand better the impact and changes of AI-based innovation
management on developing team competencies and capabilities. Pan et al. (2022)
open up the opportunity for future research to discover which factors influence
potential alienation and fear regarding using AI as a substitute for humans in
organizational tasks.
j) Management and AI: Füller et al. (2022) also note a gap for future research to
study the role of human-machine interaction in Management. Murray et al. (2021)
also highlight that future studies should understand when and how AI serves as a
coordination mechanism in contemporary organizations and what the suitability of
these technologies would be to coordinate specific activities within an organization.
Sarlak et al. (2020) note that there is a need to plan how AI can be managed within
organizations, and ANT may be a promising approach to achieve that.
k) AI autonomy: Hansen and Flyverbom (2015) highlight the opportunity for future
studies to explore the consequences for the organization when knowledge is
reduced to data that “speaks for itself.” Murray et al. (2021) also suggest that future
studies analyze how flexibility between historical data and new situations can be
inserted into AI algorithms in organizations, and what would be the ideal balance
point for including contingencies and considering anomalies in algorithmic
decisions.
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
l) Other studies: Although some research documents do not directly answer the
questions of the systematic literature review, it does introduce the principal works
and proponents of ANT, such as Bruno Latour, Michel Callon, and John Law.
Examples include (Bajde, 2013; Blok, 2013; Borch, 2023; Domingo, Masip, &
Costera Meijer, 2015; Frauenberger, 2019; Fuenfschilling & Binz, 2018;
Iskanderov & Pautov, 2020; Law & Lien, 2013; Law & Singleton, 2013, 2014;
Onno, Khan, Daftary, & David, 2023; Sayes, 2014; Shmargad, 2017; Williams,
2020).
6 Conclusions
This document presented a systematic literature review to understand the most relevant
research published in the last ten years dealing with the themes of ANT, ANT and AI, ANT and
IT, and Management and AI. Multiple themes were addressed because relevant research dealing
with the use of AI in organizations does not necessarily employ the ANT as a theoretical-
methodological approach. Similarly, research that uses ANT to study AI would not necessarily be
a study of Management. In addition, there could be research into other case studies that could be
applied to AI.
This research highlighted the opportunities found in the studies analyzed from the searches
in the Scopus and WoS databases. These can be grouped into ethical challenges, studies of the
transformative potential of AI in organizations and society, organizational changes brought about
by AI, relationships with consumers, the impact of AI on different areas of the organization’s
activity, governance practices and AI, organizational performance and AI, studies with multiple
IT projects, work relationships and AI, management relationships and AI, and the autonomy of AI
in organizations.
Considering the ANT, although it can be considered less prevalent in contemporary
organizational theoretical studies (van Rijmenam & Logue, 2021), it presents itself as pertinent for
investigations that address the agency of AI within organizations especially in a context in which
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
there is an interest in using AI in organizations, but its organizational dimension is not necessarily
well explored.
In addition to being effective in developing research aimed at building models and theories
(Pollack et al., 2013), it allows us to monitor the flow of interests and the stabilization of power
relations in a network of heterogeneous actors, attributing the same social relevance to all,
regardless of whether they are human or non-human (Bellanova, 2017; Prado & Calani
Baranauskas, 2014). That said, there is a growth in the adoption of ANT in organizational studies
since it is especially useful in a trend of increasing autonomy of AI for decision-making in
organizations (Borch, 2023) and also considering its potential to transform subjectivity,
organizations and society (Borch, 2023). Therefore, the above research opportunities can use ANT
as a theoretical-methodological approach for their development.
Notes
(1) Query used: TITLE-ABS-KEY ("actor-network theory") AND PUBYEAR > 2012 AND (LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "j") OR
LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "b") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "p") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "k")) AND (EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "MEDI") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "PSYC") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "NURS") OR EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "HEAL") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "NEUR") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "IMMU") OR EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "PHAR") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "VETE") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "ENVI") OR EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "EART") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "AGRI")) AND (EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Human") OR
EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Humans") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Health Care") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Human Experiment") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Adult") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Female") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Health") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD ,
"Sustainability") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Climate Change") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD ,
"Ecology") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Area") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Architecture") OR
EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Development") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Design") OR
EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Agriculture")
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MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
(2) Query used: ((ALL=(actor-network theory) AND PY=(2013-2023)) AND DT=(Proceedings Paper OR Abstract of Published
Item OR Article OR Book OR Book Chapter OR Early Access)) AND (TASCA==("MANAGEMENT" OR "SOCIOLOGY"
OR "BUSINESS" OR "BUSINESS FINANCE" OR "SOCIAL SCIENCES INTERDISCIPLINARY" OR "INFORMATION
SCIENCE LIBRARY SCIENCE" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE INFORMATION SYSTEMS" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE
THEORY METHODS" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS" OR "ENGINEERING
ELECTRICAL ELECTRONIC" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE
SOFTWARE ENGINEERING" OR "TELECOMMUNICATIONS" OR "AUTOMATION CONTROL SYSTEMS" OR
"COMPUTER SCIENCE CYBERNETICS" OR "ENGINEERING MULTIDISCIPLINARY" OR "ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE HARDWARE ARCHITECTURE" OR "MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES"
OR "MEDICAL INFORMATICS" OR "MATHEMATICS" OR "MATHEMATICS APPLIED" OR "ROBOTICS" OR
"SOCIAL SCIENCES MATHEMATICAL METHODS" OR "MATHEMATICS INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS"
OR "COMMUNICATION"))
(3) Query used: (TITLE-ABS-KEY ("actor-network theory")) AND (TITLE-ABS-KEY ("artificial intelligence") OR TITLE-ABS-
KEY ("machine learning")) AND PUBYEAR > 2012 AND (LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "j") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "b")
OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "p") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "k"))
(4) Query used: (ALL=(actor-network theory) AND (ALL=(artificial intelligence) OR ALL=(machine learning)) AND PY=(2013-
2023)) AND DT=(Proceedings Paper OR Abstract of Published Item OR Article OR Book OR Book Chapter OR Early Access)
(5) Query used: (TITLE-ABS-KEY ("actor-network theory")) AND (TITLE-ABS-KEY (information AND system*) OR TITLE-
ABS-KEY (information AND technolog*) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (information AND theor*) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY
(algorith*)) AND PUBYEAR > 2012 AND (LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "j") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "b") OR LIMIT-TO
(SRCTYPE , "p") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "k")) AND (EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "MEDI") OR EXCLUDE
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(SUBJAREA , "NEUR") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "IMMU") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "PHAR") OR EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "VETE") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "ENVI") OR EXCLUDE (SUBJAREA , "EART") OR EXCLUDE
(SUBJAREA , "AGRI")) AND (EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Human") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD ,
"Humans") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Health Care") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Human
Experiment") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Adult") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Female") OR
EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Health") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Sustainability") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Climate Change") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Ecology") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Area") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Architecture") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Development") OR EXCLUDE (EXACTKEYWORD , "Urban Design") OR EXCLUDE
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Agriculture"))
32
MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. From Analog to Algorithm: a comprehensive review of
Artificial Intelligence's intersection with Management Literature and Actor-Network Theory. Brazilian Journal
of Information Science: Research trends. vol. 18, publicação contínua, 2024, e024013. DOI: 10.36311/1981-
1640.2024.v18.e024013.
(6) Query used: (((ALL=(actor-network theory) AND (ALL=(algorithm*) OR ALL=(information technolog*) OR
ALL=(information system*) OR ALL=(information theor*)) AND PY=(2013-2023)) AND DT=(Proceedings Paper OR
Abstract of Published Item OR Article OR Book OR Book Chapter OR Early Access)) AND (TASCA==("MANAGEMENT"
OR "SOCIOLOGY" OR "BUSINESS" OR "BUSINESS FINANCE" OR "SOCIAL SCIENCES INTERDISCIPLINARY" OR
"INFORMATION SCIENCE LIBRARY SCIENCE" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE INFORMATION SYSTEMS" OR
"COMPUTER SCIENCE THEORY METHODS" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS"
OR "ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ELECTRONIC" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE" OR
"COMPUTER SCIENCE SOFTWARE ENGINEERING" OR "TELECOMMUNICATIONS" OR "AUTOMATION
CONTROL SYSTEMS" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE CYBERNETICS" OR "ENGINEERING MULTIDISCIPLINARY"
OR "ENGINEERING INDUSTRIAL" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE HARDWARE ARCHITECTURE" OR
"MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES" OR "MEDICAL INFORMATICS" OR "MATHEMATICS" OR "MATHEMATICS
APPLIED" OR "ROBOTICS" OR "SOCIAL SCIENCES MATHEMATICAL METHODS" OR "MATHEMATICS
INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS" OR "COMMUNICATION")))
(7) Query used: ((TITLE-ABS-KEY ("artificial intelligence") OR TITLE-ABS-KEY ("machine learning")) AND (TITLE-ABS-
KEY (organi?atio*))) AND PUBYEAR > 2012 AND (LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "j") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "b") OR
LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "p") OR LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE , "k")) AND (LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA , "BUSI")) AND (LIMIT-
TO (EXACTKEYWORD , "Organizations") OR LIMIT-TO (EXACTKEYWORD , "Organization") OR LIMIT-TO
(EXACTKEYWORD , "Organisational") OR LIMIT-TO (EXACTKEYWORD , "Organizational Framework"))
(8) Query used: ((ALL=(organi?atio*) AND (ALL=("artificial intelligence") OR ALL=("machine learning")) AND PY=(2013-
2023) AND DT=(Proceedings Paper OR Abstract of Published Item OR Article OR Book OR Book Chapter OR Early
Access))) AND ((TMSO==("6.3 Management") AND TASCA==("MANAGEMENT")) NOT (SJ==("ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCES ECOLOGY" OR "PSYCHOLOGY" OR "COMPUTER SCIENCE" OR "ENGINEERING" OR "INFORMATION
SCIENCE LIBRARY SCIENCE")))
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Copyright: © 2024 MONTEIRO, Wellington Rodrigo; AYROSA, Eduardo. This is an open-access article
distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA), which
permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, under the identical terms, and provided the
original author and source are credited.
Received: 18/02/2024 Accepted: 23/03/2024