Beyond the Spreadsheet: Human-AI Collaboration and the Democratic Promise of Intelligent Decision Support in Startup Ecosystems

Authors

  • Ganna Mohamed Sharkya STEM School

Abstract

As artificial intelligence increasingly mediates business decisions, understanding its societal implications becomes critical for fostering equitable innovation ecosystems. This study examines how AI-driven expert systems compare to traditional spreadsheets in startup decision- making, revealing performance differences and raising questions about human agency and implementation feasibility.

Through mixed-methods research involving a survey (n=400), a controlled experiment (n=50), qualitative interviews (n=20), and case studies (n=5), we found that AI systems improved measured decision accuracy by 16 percentage points and efficiency by 35% under controlled experimental conditions. Our human-AI collaboration framework demonstrates how transparency mechanisms and human oversight can support agency while leveraging algorithmic capabilities. Importantly, these findings should be interpreted in the context of study limitations, including the comparison between a purpose-built AI prototype and standard spreadsheet software and the relatively small experimental sample.

The research contributes to responsible AI discourse by documenting how explanation algorithms affect user trust and adoption, and how modular implementation approaches might lower access barriers. We propose an ethical framework addressing algorithmic bias, transparency, and accountability. However, claims regarding algorithmic fairness and democratic access remain prospective: this study did not directly measure fairness outcomes or differential access effects across demographic groups, and implementation costs and training requirements suggest meaningful adoption barriers that complicate a straightforward democratization narrative.

These findings have relevance for policymakers, entrepreneurs, and researchers interested in the conditions under which AI tools can be responsibly deployed in resource-constrained startup environments.

Key Words: Expert Systems, Human-AI Collaboration, Responsible Innovation, Algorithmic Fairness, Startup Ecosystems, Decision Support Systems

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Published

2026-06-17

Data Availability Statement

The data collected and analyzed during this study (including survey responses, experimental outcomes, and interview transcripts) are not publicly available due to confidentiality agreements and ethical restrictions involving human participants. However, summarized findings and methodological details are fully reported in the manuscript.

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Section

Research Articles