• DocumentCode
    565460
  • Title

    How people anthropomorphize robots

  • Author

    Fussell, Susan R. ; Kiesler, Sara ; Setlock, Leslie D. ; Yew, Victoria

  • Author_Institution
    Human Comput. Interaction Inst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
  • fYear
    2008
  • fDate
    12-15 March 2008
  • Firstpage
    145
  • Lastpage
    152
  • Abstract
    We explored anthropomorphism in people´s reactions to a robot in social context vs. their more considered judgments of robots in the abstract. Participants saw a photo and read transcripts from a health interview by a robot or human interviewer. For half of the participants, the interviewer was polite and for the other half, the interviewer was impolite. Participants then summarized the interactions in their own words and responded true or false to adjectives describing the interviewer. They later completed a post-task survey about whether a robot interviewer would possess moods, attitudes, and feelings. The results showed substantial anthropomorphism in participants´ interview summaries and true-false responses, but minimal anthropomorphism in the abstract robot survey. Those who interacted with the robot interviewer tended to anthropomorphize more in the post-task survey, suggesting that as people interact more with robots, their abstract conceptions of them will become more anthropomorphic.
  • Keywords
    human-robot interaction; social aspects of automation; anthropomorphism; health interview; human interviewer; robot interviewer; social context; Abstracts; Anthropomorphism; Educational robots; Humans; Robot sensing systems; Software; Human-robot interaction; social robots;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2008 3rd ACM/IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Amsterdam
  • ISSN
    2167-2121
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-60558-017-3
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    6249427