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Who like androids more: Japanese or US Americans?

Christoph Bartneck

Year
2008
Citations
60
Access
Open access

Abstract

This study investigates to what degree the userspsila cultural background influences their perception of a robotpsilas anthropomorphism and likeability. More specifically, robots with a conventional robot-like appearance were compared to highly anthropomorphic androids. The US American participants like the robots on average more than the Japanese participants do, but a strong interaction effect was observed between the participantspsila cultural background and the type of robot. The Japanese participants had a strong preference for conventional robots. This confirms the stereotype that Japanese like conventional robots. However, this does not hold true for highly anthropomorphic androids, which they liked less than the US American participants did. This study focused on the perception of static images of robots and the results may be different for the perception of movies of moving robots or, to an even greater extent, the perception when standing right in front of a moving robot.

Keywords

RobotPerceptionPreferenceComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceStereotype (UML)PsychologyComputer visionHuman–computer interactionSocial psychology

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