AI is becoming a fixture in many business functions, from finance to operations to marketing. In HR, it’s beginning to surface too. But as organisations look to introduce AI into their people processes, the language used to describe that relationship matters more than we think.
One term in particular, “human-in-the-loop” has become a go-to phrase among AI experts, vendors, and consultants. It’s meant to be reassuring, a way of signalling that people still have control when AI is in play.
But for HR leaders, this framing is both unhelpful and misleading.
The phrase “human-in-the-loop” originated in machine learning and robotics, where it describes scenarios where a person supervises or intervenes in automated processes. But when applied to workplace functions, especially ones as inherently human as HR—it sends the wrong message.
It positions AI as the primary actor, and humans as supervisors, there to check, correct, or override.
It implies a linear workflow where AI takes the lead and humans step in reactively.
It reduces skilled professionals to passive validators rather than strategic drivers.
It underestimates the complexity of human work, especially in areas like hiring, coaching, culture, and performance.
In HR, that’s not just inaccurate, it’s counterproductive.
AI can do many things well. It can find patterns, suggest optimisations, and streamline repetitive tasks. But it cannot:
Assess cultural fit with any real nuance
Navigate complex interpersonal issues
Make values-based decisions
Hold context about organisational priorities or history
Build trust and psychological safety
Be accountable for people-related decisions
HR is not a process to be “optimised” in the traditional, operational sense. It is a space where judgement, empathy, and context are vital. AI can’t, and shouldn’t, replace that.
Instead of asking how we fit humans into AI systems, the better question is:
How do we integrate AI into human workflows, on human terms?
Humans are the primary agents, making decisions and driving outcomes.
AI provides support, not direction—surfacing insights, automating admin, and enhancing visibility.
The flow of work remains human-centric, with AI embedded in the background, not the foreground.
This framing reflects a partnership between human expertise and machine capability, not a hierarchy where one supervises the other.
AI generating draft job descriptions—while HR fine-tunes tone, language, and inclusivity
AI surfacing potential bias in performance data—while HR interprets and decides next steps
AI helping prioritise learning needs—while HR designs the strategy to address them
AI summarising feedback themes—while HR uses that context to lead better conversations
The person stays in the driver’s seat. The AI is more like a high-performance co-pilot.
Getting the language and framing right isn’t a philosophical exercise—it has direct implications for adoption, trust, and business value.
When AI is positioned as a helper, not a threat, people are more open to using it. They feel empowered, not replaced.
HR teams that treat AI as a partner get better results. They use it to elevate their work, not shortcut it. The outcomes aren’t just faster—they’re more thoughtful and aligned with business needs.
Framing AI as part of the workflow also supports stronger ethical oversight. It makes clear that people are accountablefor decisions. That’s crucial in HR, where mistakes carry real human consequences.
At Thesmia, we believe the role of AI in HR is to support human judgement, not substitute for it. We build tools that integrate naturally into your existing workflows, giving HR professionals the context, clarity, and headspace to focus on what matters most: people.
We’re not automating away the human layer—we’re strengthening it.
Let’s retire the phrase “human-in-the-loop.” It may work for a robotics lab, but not in the real-world complexity of HR.
The future of HR isn’t AI-led. It’s human-led, AI-supported.
So instead of asking “Where should the human sit in this AI system?”, ask:
“Where can AI sit in our human system—so we can do our work better?”
That’s the future Thesmia is building.