What are the potential threats to human-AI collaboration?

The birth of any new thing is destined to change the users.
We often use this phrase to excuse ourselves when it comes to 'feeling the fish' or 'laying flat'. From the industrial revolution of the steam engine to the digital revolution of the computer, technological advancement has indeed given humans more and more capital to lie flat in certain aspects. As the AI technology with the most potential to become the next generation platform, will it make humans lazier?
That seems to be the case, but it's not good news.
According to a new study in the journal Frontiers in Robotics and Artificial Intelligence, when humans work with AI and machines, they literally 'fish for slack'. According to Cymek, the study's first author, "Teamwork can be both a blessing and a curse." Therefore, in the age of AI, the biggest crisis for humans is not to be replaced by machines, but to be 'lazy to the point of degradation'!
The crisis of human-machine cooperation has been happening for a long time
In fact, 'degeneration' due to human-machine cooperation has been occurring in the real world for a long time outside of the lab. In the field of autonomous driving, there is a phenomenon similar to 'social inertia' called 'Automation complacency', typically due to the distraction of having automation assistance.

In March 2018, in the US state of Arizona, an Uber self-driving car equipped with a safety officer struck and killed a cyclist. An analysis by the police found that if the safety officer had been looking at the road, the safety officer could have stopped 12.8 meters in front of the victim and prevented the tragedy.
Tesla is often the subject of attention from the U.S. media and regulators, primarily because of Autopilot-related accidents. A common scenario is that Tesla drivers will sleep or play games while using the Autopilot feature and be involved in fatal crashes as a result.
In the current craze for artificial intelligence, predictions of machines replacing humans are getting closer to reality. Some believe that machines will serve humans, while the other side fears that humans may accidentally create something evil.
Nowadays, the relationship between human beings and tools has evolved to a new stage. The advent of all tools has actually made human beings lazier, such as sweeping robots that make it less necessary for people to clean their houses, and cell phones that make it less necessary for people to memorize phone numbers.
However, AI technology differs from previous technologies in that it hands over more of the thinking and choosing to AI, which is essentially a black box, which is more of a ceding of thinking autonomy. When people hand over their driving decisions entirely to self-driving systems and their medical diagnoses entirely to AI systems, the potential cost could be quite different from the cost of not being able to remember a phone number.
Problems of social inertia and automated complacency can also lurk when people hand over the power to think and judge to machines as a reference, and can become a chronic poison with the repetition of tasks.