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Determined Yet Dehumanized: People Higher in Self-Control Are Seen as More Robotic

Samantha Lapka, Franki Y. H. Kung, Justin P. Brienza, Abigail A. Scholer

Year
2022
Citations
15

Abstract

Desire is part of human nature, and being vulnerable to desire is part of what differentiates humans from machines. However, individuals with high self-control—who demonstrate impressive resistance to their desires—may appear to lack such human vulnerability. We propose that people perceived as high in self-control tend to be dehumanized as more robotic, relating to potentially negative social consequences. Across six studies ( N = 2,007), people perceived those higher in self-control as more robotic. In addition, we found some evidence that this robotic-dehumanization was related to less interest in spending time with the high self-control person. This outcome was reliably linked to lower warmth perceptions that correlated with greater robotic-dehumanization. Together, our results offer new insights into the social dynamics of exhibiting high self-control.

Keywords

DehumanizationPsychologyVulnerability (computing)Control (management)Social psychologyPerceptionArtificial intelligenceSociologyComputer scienceComputer security

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