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Evaluation of the uncanny valley hypothesis based on declared emotional response and psychophysiological reaction

Dawid Ratajczyk, Marcin Jukiewicz, Paweł Łupkowski

Year
2019
Citations
12

Abstract

Abstract The uncanny valley (UV) hypothesis suggests that the observation of almost human-like characters causes an increase of discomfort. We conducted a study using self-report questionnaire, response time measurement, and electrodermal activity (EDA) evaluation. In the study, 12 computer-generated characters (robots, androids, animated, and human characters) were presented to 33 people (17 women) to (1) test the effect of a background context on the perception of characters, (2) establish whether there is a relation between declared feelings and physiological arousal, and (3) detect the valley of the presented stimuli. The findings provide support for reverse relation between human-likeness and the arousal (EDA). Furthermore, a positive correlation between EDA and human-likeness appraisal reaction time upholds one of the most common explanations of the UV – the categorization ambiguity. The absence of the significant relationship between declared comfort and EDA advocates the necessity of physiological measures for UV studies.

Keywords

Uncanny valleyArousalPsychologyFeelingContext (archaeology)CategorizationRelation (database)Cognitive psychologySocial psychologyPerception

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