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Shall I trust you? From child human-robot interaction to trusting relationships

Cinzia Di Dio, Federico Manzi, Giulia Peretti, Angelo Cangelosi, Paul L. Harris, Davide Massaro, Antonella Marchetti

Year
2019
Citations
2

Abstract

Studying trust within human-robot interaction is of great importance given the social relevance of robotic agents in a variety of contexts. We investigated the acquisition, loss and restoration of trust when preschool and school-age children played with either a human or a humanoid robot in-vivo. The relationship between trust and the quality of attachment relationships, Theory of Mind, and executive function skills was also investigated. No differences were found in children’s trust in the play-partner as a function of agency (human or robot). Nevertheless, 3-years-olds showed a trend toward trusting the human more than the robot, while 7-years-olds displayed the reverse behavioral pattern, thus highlighting the developing interplay between affective and cognitive correlates of trust.

Keywords

Human–robot interactionAgency (philosophy)Variety (cybernetics)PsychologyHumanoid robotRobotFunction (biology)Relevance (law)CognitionQuality (philosophy)

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