DocumentCode
565586
Title
Do people hold a humanoid robot morally accountable for the harm it causes?
Author
Kahn, Peter H. ; Kanda, Takayuki ; Ishiguro, Hiroshi ; Gill, Brian T. ; Ruckert, Jolina H. ; Shen, Solace ; Gary, Heather E. ; Reichert, Aimee L. ; Freier, Nathan G. ; Severson, Rachel L.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychol., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
5-8 March 2012
Firstpage
33
Lastpage
40
Abstract
Robots will increasingly take on roles in our social lives where they can cause humans harm. When robots do so, will people hold robots morally accountable? To investigate this question, 40 undergraduate students individually engaged in a 15-minute interaction with ATR´s humanoid robot, Robovie. The interaction culminated in a situation where Robovie incorrectly assessed the participant´s performance in a game, and prevented the participant from winning a $20 prize. Each participant was then interviewed in a 50-minute session. Results showed that all of the participants engaged socially with Robovie, and many of them conceptualized Robovie as having mental/emotional and social attributes. Sixty-five percent of the participants attributed some level of moral accountability to Robovie. Statistically, participants held Robovie less accountable than they would a human, but more accountable than they would a vending machine. Results are discussed in terms of the New Ontological Category Hypothesis and robotic warfare.
Keywords
human-robot interaction; humanoid robots; mobile robots; ontologies (artificial intelligence); statistical analysis; ATR humanoid robot; Robovie; emotional attributes; mental attributes; moral accountability; ontological category hypothesis; robotic warfare; semiautonomous robotic car; social attributes; Educational robots; Ethics; Games; Humans; Interviews; Psychology; human-robot interaction; interaction pattern; morality; robot causing harm; sociality;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2012 7th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Boston, MA
ISSN
2167-2121
Print_ISBN
978-1-4503-1063-5
Electronic_ISBN
2167-2121
Type
conf
Filename
6249577
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