Unavoidable Social Contagion of False Memory From Robots to Humans

被引:1
作者
Huang, Tsung-Ren [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,6 ]
Cheng, Yu-Lan [1 ]
Rajaram, Suparna [5 ]
机构
[1] Natl Taiwan Univ, Dept Psychol, Taipei, Taiwan
[2] Natl Taiwan Univ, Grad Inst Brain & Mind Sci, Taipei, Taiwan
[3] Natl Taiwan Univ, Inst Appl Math Sci, Taipei, Taiwan
[4] Natl Taiwan Univ, Ctr Artificial Intelligence & Adv Robot, Taipei, Taiwan
[5] SUNY Stony Brook, Dept Psychol, Stony Brook, NY USA
[6] Natl Taiwan Univ, Dept Psychol, Room S103,1,Sect 4,Roosevelt Rd, Taipei 10617, Taiwan
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
human-robot interaction; social contagion; false memory; misinformation; CONTINUED INFLUENCE; REMEMBERING WORDS; MISINFORMATION; PERSONALITY; ACCURACY; WARNINGS; ADULTS;
D O I
10.1037/amp0001230
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Many of us interact with voice- or text-based conversational agents daily, but these conversational agents may unintentionally retrieve misinformation from human knowledge databases, confabulate responses on their own, or purposefully spread disinformation for political purposes. Does such misinformation or disinformation become part of our memory to further misguide our decisions? If so, can we prevent humans from suffering such social contagion of false memory? Using a social contagion of memory paradigm, here, we precisely controlled a social robot as an example of these emerging conversational agents. In a series of two experiments (Sigma N = 120), the social robot occasionally misinformed participants prior to a recognition memory task. We found that the robot was as powerful as humans at influencing others. Despite the supplied misinformation being emotion- and value-neutral and hence not intrinsically contagious and memorable, 77% of the socially misinformed words became the participants' false memory. To mitigate such social contagion of false memory, the robot also forewarned the participants about its reservation toward the misinformation. However, one-time forewarnings failed to reduce false memory contagion. Even relatively frequent, item-specific forewarnings could not prevent warned items from becoming false memory, although such forewarnings helped increase the participants' overall cautiousness. Therefore, we recommend designing conversational agents to, at best, avoid providing uncertain information or, at least, provide frequent forewarnings about potentially false information.
引用
收藏
页码:285 / 298
页数:14
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [1] Bang Yejin, 2023, A multitask, multilingual, multimodal evaluation of chatgpt on reasoning, hallucination, and interactivity
  • [2] Social robots for education: A review
    Belpaeme, Tony
    Kennedy, James
    Ramachandran, Aditi
    Scassellati, Brian
    Tanaka, Fumihide
    [J]. SCIENCE ROBOTICS, 2018, 3 (21)
  • [3] Human-Robot Collaboration Acceptance Model: Development and Comparison for Germany, Japan, China and the USA
    Broehl, Christina
    Nelles, Jochen
    Brandl, Christopher
    Mertens, Alexander
    Nitsch, Verena
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ROBOTICS, 2019, 11 (05) : 709 - 726
  • [4] Beyond Conversational Artificial Intelligence
    Campbell, Mark
    [J]. COMPUTER, 2020, 53 (12) : 121 - 125
  • [5] Emotional content enhances true but not false memory for categorized stimuli
    Choi, Hae-Yoon
    Kensinger, Elizabeth A.
    Rajaram, Suparna
    [J]. MEMORY & COGNITION, 2013, 41 (03) : 403 - 415
  • [6] Can Robots Earn Our Trust the Same Way Humans Do? A Systematic Exploration of Competence, Warmth, and Anthropomorphism as Determinants of Trust Development in HRI
    Christoforakos, Lara
    Gallucci, Alessio
    Surmava-Grosse, Tinatini
    Ullrich, Daniel
    Diefenbach, Sarah
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN ROBOTICS AND AI, 2021, 8
  • [7] Personality and Memory Conformity
    Doughty, Nicole
    Paterson, Helen M.
    MacCann, Carolyn
    Monds, Lauren A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2017, 38 (01) : 12 - 20
  • [8] Misinformation effects in eyewitness memory: The presence and absence of memory impairment as a function of warning and misinformation accessibility
    Eakin, DK
    Schreiber, TA
    Sergent-Marshall, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2003, 29 (05) : 813 - 825
  • [9] Correcting false information in memory: Manipulating the strength of misinformation encoding and its retraction
    Ecker, Ullrich K. H.
    Lewandowsky, Stephan
    Swire, Briony
    Chang, Darren
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2011, 18 (03) : 570 - 578
  • [10] Explicit warnings reduce but do not eliminate the continued influence of misinformation
    Ecker, Ullrich K. H.
    Lewandowsky, Stephan
    Tang, David T. W.
    [J]. MEMORY & COGNITION, 2010, 38 (08) : 1087 - 1100