Department of Communication, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2021 Mar;24(3):182-187. doi: 10.1089/cyber.2020.0175. Epub 2021 Feb 26.
This experiment ( = 228) examined how exposure to a talking head doppelganger created by an artificial intelligence (AI) program influenced affect-based trust toward AIs. Using a 3 (talking head featuring the participant's or a stranger's face, audio-only condition) by 2 (pro-AI pitch and anti-AI pitch playback) design, we uncovered that exposure to a talking head featuring the participant's face instead of a stranger's face increased uncanny valley perceptions. Furthermore, uncanny valley perceptions mediated the link between exposure to a talking head with the participant's face on affect-based trust. Overall, exposure to a doppelganger talking head, who delivered a persuasive pitch, triggered discomfort on the participant whose features were sourced to craft a synthetic talking head, which in turn decreased affect-based trust attributed to AIs. This phenomenon is rooted in basic psychological mechanisms that underpin the uncanny valley hypothesis. Future studies may test for these findings across different platforms and also provide evidence regarding user mental processing.
本实验( = 228)旨在研究人工智能(AI)程序生成的说话人头像复制品的暴露如何影响基于情感的对 AI 的信任。采用 3(参与者或陌生人的面部特征的说话人头像、仅音频条件)×2(支持 AI 的演讲和反对 AI 的演讲播放)设计,我们发现,暴露于具有参与者自身面部特征的说话人头像而非陌生人的面部特征会增加怪异谷感知。此外,怪异谷感知在参与者对具有自身面部特征的说话头的暴露与基于情感的信任之间起到中介作用。总体而言,暴露于说话人头像复制品会引发不适,而这些复制品是由参与者的特征塑造而成的,这会降低参与者对 AI 的基于情感的信任。这种现象源于基本的心理机制,这些机制为怪异谷假说提供了依据。未来的研究可能会在不同的平台上检验这些发现,并提供有关用户心理处理的证据。