HRI
My Humorous Robot
Isabelle M. Menne, Benjamin P. Lange, Dagmar Unz
- Year
- 2018
- Citations
- 15
Abstract
Research suggests, interpersonal competences such as having a sense of humor can help establish sociality in human-robot interaction. This study tested the effect of different types of jokes told by either a human or a robot (NAO) on the perceived intelligence and liking of the narrator. Results of a mixed-design ANOVA showed that only clever jokes could increase the attribution of intelligence to a robot. No significant differences were found for different types of jokes on liking the robot.
Keywords
SocialityPsychologyAttributionRobotInterpersonal communicationSocial psychologyHuman–robot interactionSocial robotComputer scienceCognitive psychology
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