Home /Research /Evaluating Gender Ambiguity, Novelty and Anthropomorphism in Humming and Talking Voices for Robots
PERCEPTION

Evaluating Gender Ambiguity, Novelty and Anthropomorphism in Humming and Talking Voices for Robots

Johanna Magdalena Kuch, Jauwairia Nasir, Silvan Mertes, Ruben Schlagowski, Christian Becker-Asano, Elisabeth André

Year
2024
Citations
3

Abstract

This paper investigates the effects of gender neutralization on the perception of anthropomorphism, gender specificity, and novelty for human voices, comparing spoken and hummed voice modalities. We evaluated gender-neutralized and original voice samples in both spoken and hummed formats using an online survey. Our results confirm that gender-neutralizing filters effectively reduce perceived gender specificity in both modalities, supporting their use in creating gender-neutral voices for humanoid robots. Hummed voices were perceived as more anthropomorphic and less novel than spoken voices, suggesting that non-verbal sound modalities can enhance the human likeness of gender-neutral androids while maintaining gender ambiguity. The study contributes to HRI by highlighting the potential of humming to fulfill users’ expectations of interaction with android robots.

Keywords

NoveltyAmbiguityHumRobotComputer sciencePsychologyHuman–computer interactionCognitive psychologyArtificial intelligenceSocial psychology

Related papers

Browse all PERCEPTION papers