When performing actions with robots, attribution of intentionality affects the sense of joint agency

Author:

Navare Uma Prashant12ORCID,Ciardo Francesca13ORCID,Kompatsiari Kyveli14ORCID,De Tommaso Davide1ORCID,Wykowska Agnieszka1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Social Cognition in Human-Robot Interaction, Italian Institute of Technology, 16152 Genova, Italy.

2. Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Science and Engineering, University of Manchester, M13 9PL, Manchester, United Kingdom.

3. Department of Psychology, University of Milan-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.

4. Section for Cognitive Systems, DTU Compute, Kgs. Lyngby, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Abstract

Sense of joint agency (SoJA) is the sense of control experienced by humans when acting with others to bring about changes in the shared environment. SoJA is proposed to arise from the sensorimotor predictive processes underlying action control and monitoring. Because SoJA is a ubiquitous phenomenon occurring when we perform actions with other humans, it is of great interest and importance to understand whether—and under what conditions—SoJA occurs in collaborative tasks with humanoid robots. In this study, using behavioral measures and neural responses measured by electroencephalography (EEG), we aimed to evaluate whether SoJA occurs in joint action with the humanoid robot iCub and whether its emergence is influenced by the perceived intentionality of the robot. Behavioral results show that participants experienced SoJA with the robot partner when it was presented as an intentional agent but not when it was presented as a mechanical artifact. EEG results show that the mechanism that influences the emergence of SoJA in the condition when the robot is presented as an intentional agent is the ability to form similarly accurate predictions about the sensory consequences of our own and others’ actions, leading to similar modulatory activity over sensory processing. Together, our results shed light on the joint sensorimotor processing mechanisms underlying the emergence of SoJA in human-robot interaction and underscore the importance of attribution of intentionality to the robot in human-robot collaboration.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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