...

Logo Mercure blois centre
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Most people use AI agents for productivity and learning, Perplexity says

Business • Dec 10, 2025, 12:01 AM
3 min de lecture
1

Millions of people are using artificial intelligence (AI) agents for learning or productivity in their personal lives, in what researchers say is the first study on their adoption.

AI agents are like online assistants that can plan and execute complex tasks with little human supervision, based on a user’s request. In 2025, many of the world’s biggest AI companies, including Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI launched or expanded their own digital assistants.

A Harvard University researcher teamed up with one such company, Perplexity AI, to examine data from the startup’s AI browser and digital assistant, Comet, which launched in July 2025.

The researchers analysed hundreds of millions of queries to understand how the agent was being used and published their findings, which have not yet been peer-reviewed, online this week.

The researchers classified users based on their jobs and the ways they typically used the agent.

People who started using AI agents early on, as well as users from wealthier, more highly educated countries were more likely to “adopt or actively use the agent,” the researchers said.

More than 70 per cent worked in a digital or knowledge-intensive field, for example academia, finance, marketing, or entrepreneurship, the study found.

The fields with the fewest AI agent users were those that “require interacting with the physical environment,” such as energy and agriculture, it said.

Thirty-six percent of all tasks assigned to an AI agent were considered “productivity and workflow” tasks such as creating or editing documents, filtering emails, summarising investment information, or creating calendar events.

The second most common tasks were related to “learning and research,” with 21 percent of queries asking an agent to summarise course materials or research information.

Other popular tasks included assistance with shopping, travel, and job-related searches.

The users asked their AI agents for more help in their personal lives than their professional ones: 55 per cent of questions were related to their after-hours lives compared to 30 per cent that were related to work.

Another 16 per cent of queries were related to education.

The study showed how people used the AI agent evolved over time. Users who started with simple, personal tasks involving topics like travel and media often pivoted over time to more labour-intensive queries that had to do with productivity, learning, and careers.


Today

Analysis: Trump's trade and tax policies set to widen EU-US innovation gap in 2026
Business • 2:58 PM
11 min
Companies say the EU’s deregulation efforts are insufficient against Trump's “carrot-and-stick” strategy of pairing generous US tax incentives with a punitive 15% tariff on imports from the EU.
Read the article
Disinformation is a worldwide issue. Here is how Central Asia is combating it
Business • 2:21 PM
3 min
Turkic-speaking countries explore coordinated approach to fake news as global tech platforms evade national regulations.
Read the article
Italian media braces for shake-up as Greek buyer swoops in for Gedi
Business • 2:07 PM
6 min
The ongoing negotiations could bring a watershed moment for the Italian publishing landscape. The sale of La Repubblica, a symbol of secular and critical journalism, could mark the end of a key editorial era.
Read the article
After ‘code red’ alert, OpenAI releases GPT-5.2 with ‘more accuracy, less hallucinations’
Business • 1:03 PM
3 min
After reportedly issuing a ‘code red’ in response to intense competition from Anthropic and Google, OpenAI has released its latest AI model, GPT-5.2. Here’s what to know.
Read the article
Crypto king Do Kwon jailed for 15 years over $40bn stablecoin fraud
Business • 11:33 AM
5 min
The co-founder of cryptocurrency firm Terraform Labs was sentenced to 15 years in prison after a US court found that his $40bn stablecoin ecosystem was sustained by fraud.
Read the article
China has a new 'condom tax'. Residents are worried about the health risks
Business • 9:59 AM
5 min
Experts are concerned over potential increases in unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases due to higher costs for contraceptives.
Read the article
Here's why Chinese carmakers are beating the Europeans in Kazakhstan
Business • 9:19 AM
20 min
Localisation is the best bet car manufacturers can make to keep demand stable. South Korea, China, and the US already benefit from it. Is it time for Europe to do the same?
Read the article
Russian marketplaces to benefit from new EAEU Customs Code
Business • 9:15 AM
5 min
The Eurasian Economic Union, including Kazakhstan, is working on introducing a new Customs Code, which will largely benefit Russian marketplaces over platforms like Amazon or Temu.
Read the article
Donald Trump signs executive order to block US states enforcing their own AI regulations
Business • 9:01 AM
2 min
Members of Congress from both parties, as well as civil liberties and consumer rights groups, have pushed for more regulations on AI, saying there is not enough oversight for the powerful technology.
Read the article
Reddit challenges Australia's under-16 social media ban, claims law curbs political discussion
Business • 8:33 AM
5 min
Reddit argues that the world-first law is unconstitutional because it infringes on Australia’s implied freedom of political communication.
Read the article
Cheap online fake accounts make misinformation a ‘thriving underground market’, study finds
Business • 6:02 AM
5 min
A new Cambridge University index exposes the thriving underground market where fake social media account verifications can be purchased for as little as 8 cents, fueling online manipulation and election interference worldwide.
Read the article