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Influence of Animallike Affective Non-verbal Behavior on Children’s Perceptions of a Zoomorphic Robot

Isobel Voysey, Lynne Baillie, Joanne M. Williams, J. Michael Herrmann

Year
2022
Citations
4

Abstract

Zoomorphic robots are a promising tool for animal welfare education and could be used to teach children that animals have minds and emotions and thereby reduce acceptance of cruelty towards animals. This study investigated the influence of animallike affective non-verbal behavior on children’s perceptions of the attributes and mental abilities of a zoomorphic robot, as well as their acceptance of cruelty towards it. Children who interacted with a robot that displayed animallike affective non-verbal behavior ascribed a significantly higher level of mental abilities. Higher levels of perceived mental abilities were not generally correlated with lower acceptance of cruelty but higher levels of perceived social attributes were. Post-hoc analysis of reasoning given for unacceptability of cruelty found that the group of children who made moral judgments about the cruelty had rated the zoomorphic robot as significantly more animate.

Keywords

PerceptionRobotPsychologyCognitive psychologyComputer scienceHuman–computer interactionArtificial intelligence

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