Responses to robot social roles and social role framing

V. Groom, Vasant Srinivasan, Cindy L. Bethel, R. Murphy, Lorin Dole, C. Nass
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引用次数: 38

Abstract

Promoting dependents' perceptions of point-of-injury care robots as social actors may elicit feelings of companionship and diminish stress. However, numerous rescuers may control these robots and communicate with dependents through the robot, creating communication and interaction challenges that may be best addressed by creating a pure medium robot expressing no social identity. In addition, setting dependents' expectations regarding the robot's social role may improve perceptions of the robot and trust in the robot's suggestions. In a 3 (role: pure medium vs. social medium vs. social actor) × 2 (framing: framed vs. unframed) between-participants design, participants interacted with a simulation of a robot in a search and rescue context (N=84). Robot social behavior decreased participants' fear, yet made participants feel more isolated. Framing generated increased trust in the robot. Implications for the theory and design of robots and human-robot interaction are discussed.
对机器人社会角色和社会角色框架的回应
促进患者对创伤点护理机器人作为社会行动者的认知可能会引发陪伴感并减轻压力。然而,许多救援人员可能会控制这些机器人,并通过机器人与依赖者进行交流,从而产生交流和互动方面的挑战,最好的解决办法可能是创造一个不表达社会身份的纯媒介机器人。此外,设定被抚养人对机器人社会角色的期望可能会提高对机器人的感知和对机器人建议的信任。在3(角色:纯媒介vs.社会媒介vs.社会行动者)x2(框架:有框架vs.无框架)参与者之间的设计中,参与者在搜索和救援环境中与机器人模拟进行互动(N=84)。机器人的社交行为减少了参与者的恐惧,但也让参与者感到更加孤立。框架增加了对机器人的信任。讨论了机器人理论和设计以及人机交互的意义。
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