Lakatos Gabriella, Janiak Mariusz, Malek Lukasz, Muszynski Robert, Konok Veronika, Tchon Krzysztof, Miklósi A
Comparative Ethology Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, Budapest, 1117, Hungary,
Anim Cogn. 2014 Mar;17(2):387-97. doi: 10.1007/s10071-013-0670-7. Epub 2013 Sep 12.
This study investigated whether dogs would engage in social interactions with an unfamiliar robot, utilize the communicative signals it provides and to examine whether the level of sociality shown by the robot affects the dogs' performance. We hypothesized that dogs would react to the communicative signals of a robot more successfully if the robot showed interactive social behaviour in general (towards both humans and dogs) than if it behaved in a machinelike, asocial way. The experiment consisted of an interactive phase followed by a pointing session, both with a human and a robotic experimenter. In the interaction phase, dogs witnessed a 6-min interaction episode between the owner and a human experimenter and another 6-min interaction episode between the owner and the robot. Each interaction episode was followed by the pointing phase in which the human/robot experimenter indicated the location of hidden food by using pointing gestures (two-way choice test). The results showed that in the interaction phase, the dogs' behaviour towards the robot was affected by the differential exposure. Dogs spent more time staying near the robot experimenter as compared to the human experimenter, with this difference being even more pronounced when the robot behaved socially. Similarly, dogs spent more time gazing at the head of the robot experimenter when the situation was social. Dogs achieved a significantly lower level of performance (finding the hidden food) with the pointing robot than with the pointing human; however, separate analysis of the robot sessions suggested that gestures of the socially behaving robot were easier for the dogs to comprehend than gestures of the asocially behaving robot. Thus, the level of sociality shown by the robot was not enough to elicit the same set of social behaviours from the dogs as was possible with humans, although sociality had a positive effect on dog-robot interactions.
本研究调查了狗是否会与不熟悉的机器人进行社交互动,是否会利用机器人提供的交流信号,并考察机器人表现出的社交程度是否会影响狗的行为表现。我们假设,如果机器人总体上表现出互动性社交行为(对人类和狗都如此),那么狗对机器人交流信号的反应会比机器人表现得像机器一样、缺乏社交性时更成功。实验包括一个互动阶段,之后是一个指向环节,与人类实验者和机器人实验者都进行。在互动阶段,狗目睹了主人与人类实验者之间6分钟的互动情节,以及主人与机器人之间6分钟的互动情节。每个互动情节之后是指向阶段,在这个阶段,人类/机器人实验者通过使用指向手势(双向选择测试)来指示隐藏食物的位置。结果表明,在互动阶段,狗对机器人的行为受到不同接触的影响。与人类实验者相比,狗花更多时间待在机器人实验者附近,当机器人表现出社交行为时,这种差异更加明显。同样,在社交情境下,狗花更多时间凝视机器人实验者的头部。与指向的人类相比,狗通过指向的机器人找到隐藏食物的成功率显著更低;然而,对机器人环节的单独分析表明,表现出社交行为的机器人的手势比表现出非社交行为的机器人的手势更容易被狗理解。因此,尽管社交性对狗与机器人的互动有积极影响,但机器人表现出的社交程度不足以像人类那样引发狗的同一组社交行为。