Department of Psychology, Center for Complex Systems & Brain Science, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA.
Dev Psychobiol. 2012 Mar;54(2):124-32. doi: 10.1002/dev.20583. Epub 2011 Jul 14.
When adults view very realistic humanoid robots or computer avatars they often exhibit an aversion to them. This phenomenon, known as the "uncanny valley," is assumed to be evolutionary in origin, perhaps tapping into modules for disgust or attractiveness that detect violations of our normal expectations regarding social signals. Here, we test an alternative hypothesis that the uncanny valley is developmental in origin and, thus, that specific early experience with real human faces leads to its eventual emergence. To test this idea, we measured visual preferences in response to all possible pairs of a human face, realistic avatar face, and an unrealistic avatar face in groups of 6-, 8-, 10-, and 12-month-old infants. Consistent with the developmental hypothesis, we found that the uncanny valley effect emerges at 12 months of age suggesting that perceptual experience with real human faces is critical to its emergence.
当成年人观看非常逼真的人形机器人或计算机化身时,他们往往会对其产生反感。这种现象被称为“恐怖谷”,据推测是进化起源的,可能利用了厌恶或吸引力模块来检测违反我们对社会信号的正常期望的行为。在这里,我们测试了一个替代假设,即恐怖谷是发育起源的,因此,特定的早期真实人脸体验会导致其最终出现。为了验证这一想法,我们在 6、8、10 和 12 个月大的婴儿群体中,测量了对所有可能的人脸、逼真的虚拟化身脸和不逼真的虚拟化身脸的成对视觉偏好。与发展假说一致,我们发现恐怖谷效应出现在 12 个月大时,这表明对真实人脸的感知经验对于其出现至关重要。