Children's Responding to Humanlike Agents Reflects an Uncanny Valley

M. Strait, Heather L. Urry, P. Muentener
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Both perceptual mechanisms (e.g., threat detection/avoidance) and social mechanisms (e.g., fears fostered via negative media) may explain the existence of the uncanny valley; however, existing literature lacks sufficient evidence to decide whether one, the other, or a combination best accounts for the valley's effects. As perceptually oriented explanations imply the valley should be evident early in development, we investigated whether it presents in the responding of children ($N=80$; ages 5–10) to agents of varying human similarity. We found that, like adults, children were most averse to highly humanlike robots (relative to less humanlike robots and humans). But, unlike adults, children's aversion did not translate to avoidance. The findings thus indicate, consistent with perceptual explanations, that the valley effect manifests well before adulthood. However, further research is needed to understand the emergence of the valley's behavioral consequences.
儿童对类人代理的反应反映了一个恐怖谷
知觉机制(例如,威胁检测/回避)和社会机制(例如,通过负面媒体培养的恐惧)都可以解释恐怖谷的存在;然而,现有文献缺乏足够的证据来决定是其中一种,另一种,还是两者的结合最能解释山谷的影响。由于知觉导向的解释暗示山谷应该在发育早期就很明显,我们调查了它是否出现在儿童的反应中(N=80;年龄5-10岁)到不同人类相似度的代理人。我们发现,和成年人一样,孩子们最讨厌非常像人类的机器人(相对于不太像人类的机器人和人类而言)。但是,与成年人不同的是,孩子们的厌恶并没有转化为回避。因此,研究结果表明,与感性解释一致,山谷效应在成年之前就表现出来了。然而,需要进一步的研究来了解山谷的出现对行为的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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