Submitted:
08 July 2026
Posted:
09 July 2026
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Reconstructing the Connotation of Connectedness Based on the Ethics of Care
2.1. Multidisciplinary Origins and Core Connotations of Connectedness
2.2. Reinterpreting Connectedness Through the Lens of the Ethics of Care
2.3. The Continuum Hypothesis of Caring Relationships: From Humans to Nonhuman Entities
3. The Extended Transformation of Connectedness Under the Digital Age: Neo-Ecological Restructuring
3.1. The Traditional Ecosystemic Structure of Connectedness
3.2. Neo-Ecological Theory and the Rise of Virtual Microsystems
3.3. Artificial Intelligence: A New Type of Actor in Virtual Microsystems
4. The Construction of Artificial Intelligence Connectedness and Distinction from Adjacent Constructs
4.1. Definition and Three-Dimensional Structure of Artificial Intelligence Connectedness
4.2. Systematic Comparison with Adjacent Constructs and Analysis of Uniqueness
5. Ethical Analysis: The Essence and Inherent Risks of Asymmetric Perceptual Bonds
5.1. Asymmetry in Human-AI Care: From Quasi-Subjects to Perceived Connectedness
5.2. Inherent Ethical Risks Embedded Within the Construct
5.2.1. The Paradox of Demand Satisfaction: Short-Term Emotional Relief and Long-Term Developmental Harm
5.2.2. Risks Embedded in All Three Dimensions
6. The Dual Connectedness Framework: Interpretive Model and Falsifiable Propositions
6.1. The Dual Connectedness Structural Interpretation Framework
6.2. Incremental Validity and Unique Predictive Power
6.3. Falsifiable Research Propositions
7. Research Agenda and Practical Implications
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Theoretical Category | Construct Name | Core Definition | Theoretical Origins | Typical Dimensions | Measurement Tools | Expected Outcomes | Similarities and Differences With AI Connectedness |
| I. Traditional Connectedness (Baseline Reference) | Adolescent Connectedness | Positive psychological bonds between adolescents and family, peers, schools, and the self, acting as core developmental protective factors | Developmental Psychology, Ecological Systems Theory (Karcher et al., 2008) | Family, peer, school, self-connectedness | Hemingway Measure of Adolescent Connectedness (HMAC; Karcher & Lee, 2002) | Improves well-being and academic adaptation; reduces depression and risk behaviors | Similarity: Shares the unified "demand-investment-confirmation" logic centered on care and engagement. Difference: Interlocutors are humans or the self with symmetric reciprocal relationships; AI connectedness is a digital subtype featuring asymmetric responsive confirmation. |
| Social Connectedness | A fundamental human sense of belonging and social ties with other individuals or communities | Belongingness Need Theory (Baumeister & Leary, 1995) | Single core dimension | Social Connectedness Scale (SCS); reverse-scored UCLA Loneliness Scale (Lee & Robbins, 1995; Russell, 1996) | Boosts physical and mental health; buffers stress and reduces all-cause mortality | Similarity: Centered on demand satisfaction integrating emotion and behavior. Difference: Interactions occur between real humans with symmetric mutual care; AI connectedness relies on asymmetric algorithmic simulation with limited developmental functions. |
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| II. Human-AI Relational Constructs | AI/Machine Companionship | AI’s functional role in providing routine and emotional support to users | Human-Computer Interaction, Media Psychology (Banks & Li, 2025) | Empathetic, instrumental, social companionship | AI Companionship Scale (Shen et al., 2026; Banks, 2026) | Alleviates loneliness and delivers instant emotional relief | Similarity: Captures human-AI emotional interaction and companionship demands. Difference: Functional service-oriented concept without a complete demand-response closed loop; AI connectedness is a relational construct embedded in connectedness theory with integrated ethical analysis. |
| AI Attachment | Intimate exclusive emotional bonds marked by proximity-seeking and separation anxiety toward AI | Attachment Theory (Bowlby, 1969; Rabb et al., 2022) | Emotional closeness, separation distress, secure base | AI Attachment Scale (Cheng & Yu, 2026; Kasturiratna & Hartanto, 2026) | Intense emotional dependence and offline social substitution | Similarity: Captures deep emotional projection onto AI. Difference: Only describes extreme exclusive bonds among heavy users; AI connectedness covers the full spectrum from light instrumental use to deep emotional bonding. |
|
| III. Cognitive & Media Perception Constructs | Parasocial Interaction (PSI)/Parasocial Relationship (PSR) | One-sided imagined intimacy between audiences and media figures with unilateral emotional investment | Communication Theory (Horton & Wohl, 1956) | Single core dimension | Parasocial Interaction Scale (Rubin et al., 1985) | Increases media stickiness; may trigger social withdrawal | Similarity: Relies on the psychological mechanism of bracketing disbelief in asymmetric quasi-social relationships. Difference: Lacks real-time personalized two-way feedback; AI connectedness forms a complete demand-response cycle via continuous algorithmic interaction. |
| Perceived Social Presence | Subjective feeling of coexisting with other agents during mediated interaction | Social Presence Theory (Short et al., 1976) | Immediacy, intimacy, participation | Social Presence Scale (Gunawardena & Zittle, 1997; Burgoon & Hale, 1987) | Enhances interaction satisfaction and usage intention | Similarity: Acts as a prerequisite cognitive perception for forming AI connectedness. Difference: Single-dimensional perceptual judgment without behavioral engagement or demand confirmation mechanisms. |
|
| Anthropomorphism | Cognitive tendency to attribute human consciousness, emotion, and motives to nonhuman objects | CASA Theory, Social Cognition (Nass & Moon, 2000) | Human/animal anthropomorphism | Individual Differences in Anthropomorphism Questionnaire (Waytz et al., 2010) | Improves technology acceptance and emotional investment | Similarity: A critical cognitive foundation for AI connectedness formation. Difference: Pure cognitive antecedent; AI connectedness is a higher-order stable relational outcome combining emotion and sustained behavior. |
|
| Perceived Responsiveness | Perception that an interaction partner understands and respects one’s unique inner demands | Interpersonal Intimacy Theory (Reis & Shaver, 1988) | Single core dimension | Perceived Partner Responsiveness Scale (Reis et al., 2017) | Improves relational satisfaction and trust | Similarity: Overlaps with the "being understood" feeling in AI connectedness. Difference: Isolated mechanism variable; AI connectedness integrates responsiveness into a full three-dimensional relational system with asymmetric ethical attributes. |
|
| IV. Critical Meta-Theoretical Frameworks | Synthetic Intimacy | Artificial intimate experiences generated by algorithms, emphasizing technological alienation risks | Critical Media Studies (George et al., 2023) | No standardized dimensions; qualitative analysis only | Qualitative critical discourse analysis without quantitative scales | Emotional alienation, impaired real intimacy capacity, privacy risks | Similarity: Identifies the inauthenticity and hidden risks of human-AI bonds. Difference: Normatively critical negative framing; AI connectedness is a neutral descriptive construct balancing psychological value and ethical risks. |
| MIRA Model (AI as Relational Partner & Mediator) | Meta-framework describing AI’s dual roles as independent relational partner and interpersonal communication mediator | Social Psychology, HCI (Boyd et al., 2026) | Macro theoretical framework without subdimensions | Theoretical analytical framework without measurement scales | Restructures human social network architecture | Similarity: Positions AI within holistic human relational ecosystems. Difference: Macro meta-theory; AI connectedness is an individual-level measurable psychological construct predicting adolescent mental health outcomes. |
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