Cross-Cultural Differences in Comfort with Humanlike Robots

被引:15
作者
Castelo, Noah [1 ]
Sarvary, Miklos [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
[2] Columbia Univ, New York, NY USA
关键词
Cross-cultural; Humanoid; Comfort; JAPAN; ANTHROPOMORPHISM; APPEARANCE; THREAT; SAFETY;
D O I
10.1007/s12369-022-00920-y
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
The uncanny valley hypothesis describes how people are often less comfortable with highly humanlike robots. However, this discomfort may vary cross-culturally. This research tests how increasing robots' physical and mental human likeness affects people's comfort with robots in the United States and Japan, countries whose cultural and religious contexts differ in ways that are relevant to the evaluation of humanlike robots. We find that increasing physical and mental human likeness decreases comfort among Americans but not among Japanese participants. One potential explanation for these differences it that Japanese participants perceived robots to be more animate, having more of a mind, a soul, and consciousness, relative to American participants.
引用
收藏
页码:1865 / 1873
页数:9
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]  
Allen Micah, 2019, Wellcome Open Res, V4, P63, DOI 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15191.2
[2]  
Bartneck C., 2005, P AISB CONV S ROB CO
[3]   Measurement Instruments for the Anthropomorphism, Animacy, Likeability, Perceived Intelligence, and Perceived Safety of Robots [J].
Bartneck, Christoph ;
Kulic, Dana ;
Croft, Elizabeth ;
Zoghbi, Susana .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ROBOTICS, 2009, 1 (01) :71-81
[4]   Understanding anthropomorphism in service provision: a meta-analysis of physical robots, chatbots, and other AI [J].
Blut, Markus ;
Wang, Cheng ;
Wuenderlich, Nancy V. ;
Brock, Christian .
JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE, 2021, 49 (04) :632-658
[5]   A Meta-analysis of the Uncanny Valley's Independent and Dependent Variables [J].
Diel, Alexander ;
Weigelt, Sarah ;
Macdorman, Karl F. .
ACM TRANSACTIONS ON HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTION, 2022, 11 (01)
[6]   On seeing human: A three-factor theory of anthropomorphism [J].
Epley, Nicholas ;
Waytz, Adam ;
Cacioppo, John T. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2007, 114 (04) :864-886
[7]   Blurring Human-Machine Distinctions: Anthropomorphic Appearance in Social Robots as a Threat to Human Distinctiveness [J].
Ferrari, Francesco ;
Paladino, Maria Paola ;
Jetten, Jolanda .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ROBOTICS, 2016, 8 (02) :287-302
[8]   Thermal Infrared Imaging-Based Affective Computing and Its Application to Facilitate Human Robot Interaction: A Review [J].
Filippini, Chiara ;
Perpetuini, David ;
Cardone, Daniela ;
Chiarelli, Antonio Maria ;
Merla, Arcangelo .
APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2020, 10 (08)
[9]   Feeling robots and human zombies: Mind perception and the uncanny valley [J].
Gray, Kurt ;
Wegner, Daniel M. .
COGNITION, 2012, 125 (01) :125-130
[10]  
Haring K.S., 2014, International Journal of Affective Engineering, V13, P149, DOI [DOI 10.5057/IJAE.13.149, 10.5057/ijae.13.149]