作者
Charles R Crowell, Jason C Deska, Michael Villano, Julaine Zenk, John T Roddy Jr
发表日期
2019/5/10
期刊
JMIR human factors
卷号
6
期号
2
页码范围
e12629
出版商
JMIR Publications Inc., Toronto, Canada
简介
Background: As the prevalence of robots increases each year, understanding how we anthropomorphize and interact with them is extremely important. The three-factor theory of anthropomorphism, called the Sociality, Effectance, Elicited agent Knowledge model, guided this study. As anthropomorphism involves a person making attributions of human likeness toward a nonhuman object, this model implies that anthropomorphism can be influenced either by factors related to the person or the object.
Objective: The aim of this study was to explore factors influencing the anthropomorphism of robots, specifically the robot’s appearance (humanoid vs nonhumanoid) and agency (autonomous vs nonautonomous). We expected a humanoid robot would be anthropomorphized to a greater extent than one that was nonhumanoid. In addition, we expected that inducing an agency belief to the effect that a robot was making its own decisions would increase anthropomorphism compared with a nonagency belief that the robot was being remotely controlled by a human. We also sought to identify any role gender might play in anthropomorphizing the robot.
Methods: Participants (N= 99) were primed for agency or nonagency belief conditions and then saw a brief video depicting either a humanoid or nonhumanoid robot interacting with a confederate. After viewing the video, they completed 4 measures: perception to humanoid robots scale (PERNOD), the Epley anthropomorphic adjectives measure, the Fussel anthropomorphic adjective checklist, and the Anthropomorphic Tendencies Scale (ATS).
Results: Findings with the PERNOD scale indicated subjects did …
引用总数
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学术搜索中的文章
CR Crowell, JC Deska, M Villano, J Zenk, JT Roddy Jr - JMIR human factors, 2019