DocumentCode
1878493
Title
Responses to robot social roles and social role framing
Author
Groom, Victoria ; Srinivasan, Vasant ; Bethel, Cindy L. ; Murphy, Robin ; Dole, Lorin ; Nass, Clifford
Author_Institution
Dept. of Commun., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
23-27 May 2011
Firstpage
194
Lastpage
203
Abstract
Promoting dependents´ perceptions of point-of-injury care robots as social actors may elicit feelings of companionship and diminish stress. However, numerous rescuers may control these robots and communicate with dependents through the robot, creating communication and interaction challenges that may be best addressed by creating a pure medium robot expressing no social identity. In addition, setting dependents´ expectations regarding the robot´s social role may improve perceptions of the robot and trust in the robot´s suggestions. In a 3 (role: pure medium vs. social medium vs. social actor) × 2 (framing: framed vs. unframed) between-participants design, participants interacted with a simulation of a robot in a search and rescue context (N=84). Robot social behavior decreased participants´ fear, yet made participants feel more isolated. Framing generated increased trust in the robot. Implications for the theory and design of robots and human-robot interaction are discussed.
Keywords
disasters; human-robot interaction; psychology; service robots; social sciences; disaster response; human-robot interaction; robot social roles; social behavior; social role framing; Context; Educational robots; Games; Humans; Load modeling; Media; Human-robot interaction; disaster response; framing; social roles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Collaboration Technologies and Systems (CTS), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-638-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CTS.2011.5928687
Filename
5928687
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