• DocumentCode
    565475
  • Title

    Relational vs. group self-construal: Untangling the role of national culture in HRI

  • Author

    Evers, Vanessa ; Maldonado, H. ; Brodecki, T. ; Hinds, Phillip

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. of Inf., Univ. of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • fYear
    2008
  • fDate
    12-15 March 2008
  • Firstpage
    255
  • Lastpage
    262
  • Abstract
    As robots (and other technologies) increasingly make decisions on behalf of people, it is important to understand how people from diverse cultures respond to this capability. Thus far, much design of autonomous systems takes a Western view valuing individual preferences and choice. We challenge the assumption that Western values are universally optimal for robots. In this study, we sought to clarify the effects of users´ cultural background on human-robot collaboration by investigating their attitudes toward and the extent to which people accepted choices made by a robot or human assistant. A 2×2×2 experiment was conducted with nationality (US vs. Chinese), ingroup strength (weak vs. strong) and human vs. robot assistant as dimensions. US participants reported higher trust of and compliance with the assistants (human and robot) although when the assistant was characterized as a strong ingroup member, Chinese as compared with the US subjects were more comfortable. Chinese also reported a stronger sense of control with both assistants and were more likely to anthropomorphize the robot than were US subjects. This pattern of findings confirms that people from different national cultures may respond differently to robots, but also suggests that predictions from human-human interaction do not hold universally.
  • Keywords
    cultural aspects; human-robot interaction; social aspects of automation; HRI; autonomous systems; group self-construal; human assistant; human-robot collaboration; national culture; relational self-construal; robot assistant; robots; western values; Atmospheric measurements; Cultural differences; Humans; Particle measurements; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Human-robot collaboration; cross-cultural design;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2008 3rd ACM/IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Amsterdam
  • ISSN
    2167-2121
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-60558-017-3
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    6249443