Artimon Perspectives, Paris, France.
Institut de Neurosciences de La Timone, UMR 7289, Aix-Marseille Université-CNRS, Marseille, France.
Sci Rep. 2022 Aug 30;12(1):14794. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-14207-9.
Human-human interactions (HHI) and human-robot interactions (HRI) are compared to identify differences between cognitive processes reflecting bonding in social interactions with natural and artificial agents. We capitalize on a unique corpus of neuroimaging data (fMRI) recorded while participants freely discussed with another human or a conversational robotic head, in order to study a crucial parameter of human social cognition, namely that social interactions are adaptive bidirectional processes that evolve over time. We used linear statistics to identify regions of the brain where activity changes differently when participants carry out twelve one-minute conversations, alternating between a human and a robotic interlocutor. Results show that activity in the posterior cingulate cortex, a key region associated with social cognition, increases over time in HHI but not in HRI. These results are interpreted as reflecting a process of strengthening social bonding during repeated exchanges when the interacting agent is a human, but not a robot.
人类与人类的交互(HHI)和人类与机器人的交互(HRI)进行比较,以确定反映与自然和人工代理进行社交互动中的结合的认知过程之间的差异。我们利用独特的神经影像学数据(fMRI)语料库,记录参与者与另一个人或会话机器人头部自由讨论时的情况,以研究人类社会认知的一个关键参数,即社交互动是自适应的双向过程,随着时间的推移而演变。我们使用线性统计来识别当参与者在十二次一分钟的对话之间交替进行人类和机器人对话时,大脑中活动变化不同的区域。结果表明,在后扣带回皮层中的活动随着时间的推移在 HHI 中增加,但在 HRI 中则没有。这些结果被解释为反映了在与人类进行重复交流时,社会联系得到加强的过程,而与机器人进行交流则没有。