1 Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Glasgow , Glasgow G12 8QB , UK.
2 Wales Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University , Bangor LL57 2AS , UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2019 Apr 29;374(1771):20180034. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2018.0034.
To what extent can humans form social relationships with robots? In the present study, we combined functional neuroimaging with a robot socializing intervention to probe the flexibility of empathy, a core component of social relationships, towards robots. Twenty-six individuals underwent identical fMRI sessions before and after being issued a social robot to take home and interact with over the course of a week. While undergoing fMRI, participants observed videos of a human actor or a robot experiencing pain or pleasure in response to electrical stimulation. Repetition suppression of activity in the pain network, a collection of brain regions associated with empathy and emotional responding, was measured to test whether socializing with a social robot leads to greater overlap in neural mechanisms when observing human and robotic agents experiencing pain or pleasure. In contrast to our hypothesis, functional region-of-interest analyses revealed no change in neural overlap for agents after the socializing intervention. Similarly, no increase in activation when observing a robot experiencing pain emerged post-socializing. Whole-brain analysis showed that, before the socializing intervention, superior parietal and early visual regions are sensitive to novel agents, while after socializing, medial temporal regions show agent sensitivity. A region of the inferior parietal lobule was sensitive to novel emotions, but only during the pre-socializing scan session. Together, these findings suggest that a short socialization intervention with a social robot does not lead to discernible differences in empathy towards the robot, as measured by behavioural or brain responses. We discuss the extent to which long-term socialization with robots might shape social cognitive processes and ultimately our relationships with these machines. This article is part of the theme issue 'From social brains to social robots: applying neurocognitive insights to human-robot interaction'.
人类在多大程度上可以与机器人建立社交关系?在本研究中,我们将功能神经影像学与机器人社交干预相结合,探究同理心(社交关系的核心组成部分)对机器人的灵活性。26 名个体在接受社交机器人带回家并在一周内与之互动之前和之后都接受了相同的 fMRI 扫描。在进行 fMRI 扫描时,参与者观察到人类演员或机器人在受到电刺激时经历痛苦或愉悦的视频。我们测量了疼痛网络(与同理心和情绪反应相关的一系列大脑区域)活动的重复抑制,以检验与社交机器人交往是否会导致在观察人类和机器人代理经历痛苦或愉悦时,神经机制的重叠更大。与我们的假设相反,功能区域兴趣分析表明,社交干预后,代理的神经重叠没有变化。同样,社交干预后,观察机器人经历疼痛时,激活也没有增加。全脑分析表明,在社交干预之前,顶叶上部和早期视觉区域对新代理敏感,而在社交干预之后,内侧颞叶区域显示代理敏感性。顶下小叶的一个区域对新的情绪敏感,但仅在社交前扫描期间。总之,这些发现表明,与社交机器人进行短期社交干预并不会导致对机器人同理心的可察觉差异,无论是通过行为还是大脑反应来衡量。我们讨论了与机器人进行长期社交可能会在多大程度上塑造社交认知过程,并最终影响我们与这些机器的关系。本文是主题为“从社会大脑到社交机器人:将神经认知见解应用于人机交互”的一部分。