Assistance or Disruption? Exploring and Evaluating the Design and Trade-offs of Proactive AI Programming Support

February 25, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

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Authors Kevin Pu, Daniel Lazaro, Ian Arawjo, Haijun Xia, Ziang Xiao, Tovi Grossman, Yan Chen arXiv ID 2502.18658 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.SE Citations 38 Venue International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
AI programming tools enable powerful code generation, and recent prototypes attempt to reduce user effort with proactive AI agents, but their impact on programming workflows remains unexplored. We introduce and evaluate Codellaborator, a design probe LLM agent that initiates programming assistance based on editor activities and task context. We explored three interface variants to assess trade-offs between increasingly salient AI support: prompt-only, proactive agent, and proactive agent with presence and context (Codellaborator). In a within-subject study (N=18), we find that proactive agents increase efficiency compared to prompt-only paradigm, but also incur workflow disruptions. However, presence indicators and interaction context support alleviated disruptions and improved users' awareness of AI processes. We underscore trade-offs of Codellaborator on user control, ownership, and code understanding, emphasizing the need to adapt proactivity to programming processes. Our research contributes to the design exploration and evaluation of proactive AI systems, presenting design implications on AI-integrated programming workflow.
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