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The Influence of Robot Autonomy on Perception Distance, Acceptance and Subjective Norm

Yao Liu, S. Liao

Year
2021
Citations
2

Abstract

The emergence of automatic machines is a topic of social concern. In this study, we examine the effects of robot autonomy on perceived distance, acceptance, and subjective norm. Participants watched a video of a robot performing a variety of tasks - the robot was either autonomous and able to ignore human commands, or non-autonomous and could only obey human commands. The results showed that participants who watched videos of autonomous robots generally perceived that the robot was more distant than the non-autonomous robot. On the other hand, people who watched videos of autonomous robots were less acceptive and had lower subjective norms than watched videos of non-autonomous robots. These findings can help us better study artificial intelligence and raise new questions about what giving robots autonomy would do to human perception.

Keywords

RobotAutonomyPerceptionSocial robotPsychologyNorm (philosophy)Human–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionArtificial intelligenceAutonomous robot

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