Guest Lecture: From Socio-Technical to Anthro-Digital Systems – Updating our Terminological and Conceptual Toolkit for the Digital (and GenAI) Age

Topic: From Socio-Technical to Anthro-Digital Systems: Updating our Terminological and Conceptual Toolbox for the Digital (and GenAI) Age
A socio‑technical systems (STS) perspective has been a foundation of Information Systems (IS) research for decades. However, in a time when digital technologies—and human interaction with them—have become ubiquitous, it is worth asking whether deliberately adopting an STS perspective still provides the same analytical value as it once did. At the same time, the growing proliferation of non‑deterministic algorithms, particularly AI, introduces a new class of digital technologies with distinct characteristics and even the potential for autonomous action.
Against this backdrop, the talk introduces a novel conceptual framework: anthro‑digital (A‑D) systems. In this framework, the “anthro” component captures the strength of human roles and influences within a system, while the “digital” component reflects how deterministic the roles of the involved digital systems are. The hyphen represents the interfaces between the human and digital components.
Through several examples, the talk will illustrate how an A‑D systems perspective can help systematically unpack conceptual nuances—such as different forms of human–AI collaboration—as well as terminological questions, for example what a “conversation” between two autonomous AI agents might mean.
Speaker:
Andreas Drechsler is a Senior Lecturer in Information Systems at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. His research and teaching interests include digital architecture and security, organisational agility, higher education teaching approaches for the digital and AI age, GenAI use in knowledge work, and the conceptual and methodological foundations of design science research. He has published more than 50 papers in international journals and conferences.
Date & Location:
Tuesday, 14 April 2026, 1:00–2:00 pm
Physics Building, Room P2‑E0‑414 (AV Room)

