Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Research on artificial intelligence (AI)’s social significance (e.g., journalism/communication, and organizational research), attention is often organized around two emphases: one foregrounds disruption, framing standalone generative AI (GenAI) tools as transformative; the other foregrounds infrastructure, treating embedded AI as backgrounded, invisible features of platform design. We bridge these emphases with interactional continuity, a user-centered frame that explains cross-modality incorporation at the level of task episodes: AI use stabilizes through sequential placement in ongoing activities, while interface packaging shapes whether it is perceived and named as AI. Grounded in infrastructure theory, platform studies, and digital meaning-making, we examine every day AI use in the Global South through 28 semi-structured interviews in an Indian workplace. We used iterative AI-assisted and manual coding to identify patterns. Importantly, we found that respondents used AI as episode-level task support within familiar platform routines, illustrating how disruption and invisibility can emerge from task sequencing and interface cues.