Now you feel it, now you don’t

Author:

Quadflieg Susanne12,Ul-Haq Israr2,Mavridis Nikolaos3

Affiliation:

1. University of Bristol

2. New York University Abu Dhabi

3. National Center For Scientific Research “Demokritos”

Abstract

Abstract Robots seemingly in possession of an experiential mind, as well as humans allegedly incapable thereof, have been reported to elicit feelings of eeriness in their perceivers. The current work re-examined this claim, asking participants to rate both robots and humans in various social situations regarding their mind capacities (e.g., emotional capability, intelligence), non-mind qualities (e.g., animacy, usefulness), and overall appeal (e.g., eeriness, likeability). It was found that feelings of eeriness towards both targets formed a distinct emotional response that was separable from simple dislike. Yet, unexpectedly, eeriness towards both targets intensified, the less they were seen as possessing a typical human mind. For robots, however, this association was less consistent. Moreover, eeriness towards robots, but not towards humans, was most strongly predicted by a lack of perceived usefulness. These results indicate that mind attributions affect people’s attitudes towards each other more strongly than their attitudes towards humanoid robots.

Publisher

John Benjamins Publishing Company

Subject

Human-Computer Interaction,Linguistics and Language,Animal Science and Zoology,Language and Linguistics,Communication

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