Anthropomorphism-based causal and responsibility attributions to robots

被引:0
|
作者
Kawai, Yuji [1 ]
Miyake, Tomohito [2 ]
Park, Jihoon [1 ,3 ]
Shimaya, Jiro [4 ]
Takahashi, Hideyuki [4 ]
Asada, Minoru [1 ,3 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Osaka Univ, Inst Open & Transdisciplinary Res Initiat, Symbiot Intelligent Syst Res Ctr, Suita, Osaka 5650871, Japan
[2] Osaka Univ, Grad Sch Engn, Dept Adapt Machine Syst, Suita, Osaka 5650871, Japan
[3] Natl Inst Informat & Commun Technol, Ctr Informat & Neural Networks, Suita, Osaka 5650871, Japan
[4] Osaka Univ, Grad Sch Engn Sci, Dept Syst Innovat, Toyonaka, Osaka 5600043, Japan
[5] Int Profess Univ Technol Osaka, Kita Ku, Osaka 5300001, Japan
[6] Chubu Univ, Acad Emerging Sci, Kasugai, Aichi 4878501, Japan
关键词
SELF; MIND; SCAPEGOATS; INTERFACE;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-023-39435-5
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
People tend to expect mental capabilities in a robot based on anthropomorphism and often attribute the cause and responsibility for a failure in human-robot interactions to the robot. This study investigated the relationship between mind perception, a psychological scale of anthropomorphism, and attribution of the cause and responsibility in human-robot interactions. Participants played a repeated noncooperative game with a human, robot, or computer agent, where their monetary rewards depended on the outcome. They completed questionnaires on mind perception regarding the agent and whether the participant's own or the agent's decisions resulted in the unexpectedly small reward. We extracted two factors of Experience (capacity to sense and feel) and Agency (capacity to plan and act) from the mind perception scores. Then, correlation and structural equation modeling (SEM) approaches were used to analyze the data. The findings showed that mind perception influenced attribution processes differently for each agent type. In the human condition, decreased Agency score during the game led to greater causal attribution to the human agent, consequently also increasing the degree of responsibility attribution to the human agent. In the robot condition, the post-game Agency score decreased the degree of causal attribution to the robot, and the post-game Experience score increased the degree of responsibility to the robot. These relationships were not observed in the computer condition. The study highlights the importance of considering mind perception in designing appropriate causal and responsibility attribution in human-robot interactions and developing socially acceptable robots.
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页数:13
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