Tell me more! Assessing interactions with social robots from speech

Author:

Laban Guy1,George Jean-Noël2,Morrison Val3,Cross Emily S.14

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow , Scotland , United Kingdom

2. School of Psychology, University of Glasgow , Scotland , United Kingdom

3. School of Psychology, Bangor University , Bangor , United Kingdom

4. Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University , Sydney , Australia

Abstract

Abstract As social robots are increasingly introduced into health interventions, one potential area where they might prove valuable is in supporting people’s psychological health through conversation. Given the importance of self-disclosure for psychological health, this study assessed the viability of using social robots for eliciting rich disclosures that identify needs and emotional states in human interaction partners. Three within-subject experiments were conducted with participants interacting with another person, a humanoid social robot, and a disembodied conversational agent (voice assistant). We performed a number of objective evaluations of disclosures to these three agents via speech content and voice analyses and also probed participants’ subjective evaluations of their disclosures to three agents. Our findings suggest that participants overall disclose more to humans than artificial agents, that agents’ embodiment influences disclosure quantity and quality, and that people are generally aware of differences in their personal disclosures to three agents studied here. Together, the findings set the stage for further investigation into the psychological underpinnings of self-disclosures to artificial agents and their potential role in eliciting disclosures as part of mental and physical health interventions.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Artificial Intelligence,Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental Neuroscience,Human-Computer Interaction

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