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Do I act familiar? Investigating the Similarity-Attraction Principle on Culture-specific Communicative behaviour for Social Robots

Birgit Lugrin, Andrea Bartl, Hendrik Striepe, Jennifer Lax, Takashi TORIIZUKA

Year
2018
Citations
7

Abstract

Culture, amongst other individual and social factors, plays a crucial role in human-human interactions. If robots should become a part of our society, they should be able to act in culture-specific manners as well. In this paper, we showcase the implementation of a cultural dichotomy, namely individualism vs. collectivism, in a social robots' conversation. Presenting these conversations to human observers from Germany and Japan, we investigate whether the implemented differences are recognized as such, and whether stereotypical culture-specific behaviours that correspond to the observers' cultural background is preferred. Results suggest that the manipulations in behaviour had the intended effect, but are not reflected in personal preferences.

Keywords

ConversationCollectivismIndividualismSimilarity (geometry)Social psychologyRobotPsychologySocial robotSociologyComputer science

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