When Humanoid Robots Become Human-Like Interaction Partners: Corepresentation of Robotic Actions
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Otros documentos de la autoría: del Pobil, Angel P.; Tirado Bou, María Desamparados; Stenzel, Anna; Chinellato, Eris; Lappe, Markus; Liepelt, Roman
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Título
When Humanoid Robots Become Human-Like Interaction Partners: Corepresentation of Robotic ActionsAutoría
Fecha de publicación
2012Editor
American Psychological AssociationISSN
0096-1523; 1939-1277Cita bibliográfica
When humanoid robots become human-like interaction partners: Corepresentation of robotic actions. Stenzel, Anna; Chinellato, Eris; Bou, Maria A. Tirado; del Pobil, Ángel P.; Lappe, Markus; Liepelt, Roman Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, Vol 38(5), Oct 2012, 1073-1077. doi: 10.1037/a0029493Tipo de documento
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleVersión de la editorial
http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=search.displayrecord&uid=2012-21155-001Palabras clave / Materias
Resumen
In human-human interactions co-representing a partner’s actions is crucial to
successfully adjust and coordinate actions with others. Current research suggests that
action co-representation is restricted to intera ... [+]
In human-human interactions co-representing a partner’s actions is crucial to
successfully adjust and coordinate actions with others. Current research suggests that
action co-representation is restricted to interactions between human agents facilitating
social interaction with conspecifics. In the present study, we investigated whether
action co-representation, as measured by the Social Simon Effect (SSE), is present
when we share a task with a real humanoid robot. Further, we tested if the believed
humanness of the robot’s functional principle modulates the extent to which robotic
actions are co-represented. We described the robot to participants either as
functioning in a biologically inspired human-like way or in a purely deterministic
machine-like manner. The SSE was present in the human-like, but not in the machinelike
robot condition. The present findings suggest that humans co-represent the
actions of non-biological robotic agents when they start to attribute human-like
cognitive processes to the robot. Our findings provide novel evidence for top-down
modulation effects on action co-representation in human-robot interaction situations.
Words: 161 [-]
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Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012, Vol. 38(5)Derechos de acceso
©2013 American Psychological Association
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