视频介导的在线社交存在和遵守对认知表现的影响。

Olga Sutskova, Atsushi Senju, T. Smith
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引用次数: 1

摘要

冠状病毒(COVID-19)大流行的爆发使世界大部分地区转向远程工作和教育。在后covid -19时代,随着世界继续接受远程虚拟通信,研究在线社交参与对认知表现的影响至关重要。本研究调查了在线视频会议中虚拟同伴的存在如何影响参与者在认知关系推理任务中的表现。同伴要么在场并关注参与者,要么在场但不关注,要么不在场。我们操纵了一个虚拟同伴的代理,他可以是一个真实的人,一个由人控制的化身,或者一个人工智能(AI)控制的代理。我们假设,仅仅是虚拟伴侣的存在,以及观察参与者的表现,就会影响参与者的表现。结果与我们的假设基本一致,即仅仅是虚拟伴侣的存在就能提高认知能力,而与他们的代理无关。然而,结果的方向并不支持我们的预测。我们没有发现观察对认知表现有系统的影响,不支持我们的第二个假设。总的来说,参与者在人工智能控制的代理中表现最好,其次是虚拟角色,而在真人同伴中表现最差。我们还观察到,当虚拟同伴在场但不注意时,参与者的表现更准确,当虚拟同伴观察参与者时,与参与者单独行动相比,他们的表现更快。我们得出的结论是,与虚拟同伴一起参加在线视频会议,无论是否遵守,都能暂时提高认知表现,并讨论了这些发现的含义。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2022 APA,版权所有)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of video-mediated online social presence and observance on cognitive performance.
The onset of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has shifted most of the world toward remote working and education. As the world continues to embrace remote virtual communication in the post-COVID-19 era, it is crucial to investigate the impacts of online social copresence on cognitive performance. The present study investigated how the online videoconference presence of a virtual companion affects participants performance on cognitive relational-reasoning tasks. The companion was either present and attentive to the participant, present but nonattentive, or absent. We manipulated the agency of a virtual companion, who was either a real human, an avatar controlled by a human, or an artificial intelligence (AI)-controlled agent. We hypothesized that the mere presence of a virtual companion, and the observance of participants' performance, would influence participants' performance. The results were broadly in line with our hypothesis that a mere presence of a virtual companion improved cognitive performance irrespective of their agency. However, the direction of the results did not support our prediction. We did not find a systematic impact of observance on cognitive performance, not supporting our second hypothesis. Participants performed best overall with an AI-controlled agent, next best with an avatar and worst with a real-human companion. We also observed that participants performed more accurately when a virtual companion was present but nonattentive, and faster when a virtual companion observed the participants, compared to when the participants performed alone. We conclude that online videoconference presence with a virtual companion, regardless of observance, temporarily enhances cognitive performance, and discuss the implications of these findings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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