Viewing machines as humans but humans as machines? Social connectedness shapes the robot anthropomorphism-dehumanization link
-
Published:2024-11
Issue:
Volume:208
Page:123683
-
ISSN:0040-1625
-
Container-title:Technological Forecasting and Social Change
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Technological Forecasting and Social Change
Author:
Dang JianningORCID,
Liu LiORCID
Reference72 articles.
1. Factors in workers’ dehumanization: multiple stigmatization, social status, and workers’ sex;Agadullina;Br. J. Soc. Psychol.,2022
2. The benefits of interactions with physically present robots over video-displayed agents;Bainbridge;International Journal of Social Robotics,2011
3. Reminders of social connection can attenuate anthropomorphism: a replication and extension of Epley, Akalis, Waytz, and Cacioppo (2008);Bartz;Psychol. Sci.,2016
4. Excluded from humanity: the dehumanizing effects of social ostracism;Bastian;J. Exp. Soc. Psychol.,2010
5. Experiencing dehumanization: cognitive and emotional effects of everyday dehumanization;Bastian;Basic and Applied Psychology,2011