社会关系增加了对受欺负机器人的主动帮助

Barbara Kühnlenz, K. Kühnlenz
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文是研究人机交互(HRI)中的公民勇气的第一步。主要的研究问题是,人类用户是否会帮助被其他人欺负的机器人。先前的研究表明,通过应用社会联系机制,人类用户可以对机器人主动寻求帮助以完成特定任务产生亲社会行为。相比之下,本文研究了机器人在交互任务后被第三方欺负时的主动帮助行为。为此,在闲谈方面的社会联系,包括明确的情感适应,以诱导相似感,被应用于用户研究中的人机对话场景。作为交互上下文,选择合作对象分类任务,其中机器人从机器人需要的列表中读取对象,以便稍后完成另一个任务。为了诱导霸凌行为,在完成互动后,一个令人不安的第三个人从机器人手中拿走了清单。该研究的两个实验条件的不同之处在于是否在相互作用之前应用社会联系。根据之前的研究,结果显示,在社会关系条件下,社会存在和拟人化的评分有所提高,参与者主动提供的帮助也有所增加。令人惊讶的是,未经请求的帮助只发生在口头上,并且是针对机器人的,没有一个人类用户对欺凌的第三人采取行动。讨论了这可能是由于人类实验考官的被动存在引起的社会心理副作用,并且可能需要机器人额外的情感适应渠道。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Bonding Increases Unsolicited Helpfulness Towards A Bullied Robot
This paper is a first step towards the investigation of civil courage in human-robot interaction (HRI). The main research question is if human users would help a robot being bullied by other humans. Previous work showed that pro-social behavior can be induced in human users towards a robot pro-actively asking for their help in order to accomplish a specific task by applying mechanisms of social bonding. In contrast, this paper investigates unsolicited helpful behavior towards a robot being bullied by a third person subsequent to an interaction task. To this end, social bonding in terms of small talk including explicit emotional adaptation to induce a feeling of similarity is applied to a human-robot dialog scenario in a user study. As an interaction context, a cooperative object classification task is chosen, where a robot reads objects from a list needed by the robot to fulfill another task later. To induce bullying behavior, the list is took away from the robot by a disturbing third person after the completed interaction. The two experimental conditions of the study differ in whether or not social bonding is applied prior to the interaction. According to previous work, results showed increased ratings for social presence and anthropomorphism, as well as increased unsolicited helpfulness of the participants in the social bonding condition. Surprisingly, unsolicited help occurred only verbally and directed towards the robot and none of the human users took action against the bullying third person. It is discussed, that this may be due to social-psychological side-effects caused by the passive presence of the human experimental examiner and that additional channels of emotional adaptation by the robot may be required.
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