A Cross-Cultural Replication on Humanness Attribution

Author:

Bettinsoli Maria Laura12ORCID,Formanowicz Magdalena1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Center for Research on Social Relations, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Warsaw, Poland

2. New York University Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Abstract

Abstract. Previous research showed that targets achieving (vs. not) a goal were ascribed more humanness. We conceptually replicate previous studies by involving a population of English and Arabic speakers to test cross-cultural replicability of the effect and the contribution of sensorimotor systems in agency representation. Participants ( Ntot = 637) saw animations, where goal achievement and trajectory were manipulated. They evaluated agency, communion, humanness, and attitudes (respect and liking) toward presented targets. Goal achievement versus failure but not movement trajectory increased agency and communion ratings, which in turn affected humanness, respect, and liking (Study 1 and Study 2). Goal manipulation also directly affected humanness ratings (Study 2). Altogether, our findings suggest a superior role of success over trajectory manipulation in perceiving inanimate objects as having humanness.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

General Psychology,Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Social Psychology

Reference34 articles.

1. Agency and communion from the perspective of self versus others.

2. The determinants of consciousness of human faces

3. The first, the least and the last: Spatial asymmetries in memory and their relation to script trajectory

4. Bettinsoli, M. L. & Formanowicz, M. (2022). Supplemental materials to “A cross-cultural replication on humanness attribution: The role of agency and communion ascriptions”. https://osf.io/de7z6

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