This content originally appeared on NN/g latest articles and announcements and was authored by Feifei Liu, Maria Rosala
Summary: Information seeking in China is driven by mobile social-media apps. But how users prompt and engage with genAI mirrors what we've seen in the West.
Our recent research on information-seeking behavior found that generative AI (genAI) is meaningfully reshaping how people search — cutting through the friction of keyword foraging , accelerating habit change, and exposing a wide spectrum of AI literacy among everyday users. But those studies focused mainly on English-speaking participants from North America. A natural question follows: do these patterns hold elsewhere?
To find out, we conducted a remote study with 6 participants in China. Our sample included a mix of ages, occupations, locations, and levels of familiarity with AI. We found that the patterns we documented in the West — how people prompt, which genAI outputs they trust, and how AI literacy shapes their experience — also showed up consistently in China. But the way those patterns play out looks quite different, shaped by a mobile-first culture and a much stronger reliance on social platforms over search.
How Information Seeking Differs in China vs. North America
China's information-seeking ecosystem looks quite different from the West. Many search engines and genAI apps used in the West are not available in China.
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This content originally appeared on NN/g latest articles and announcements and was authored by Feifei Liu, Maria Rosala
Feifei Liu, Maria Rosala | Sciencx (2026-05-01T17:00:00+00:00) Information Seeking in China: A Different Ecosystem, Familiar Behavior. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2026/05/01/information-seeking-in-china-a-different-ecosystem-familiar-behavior/
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