Castelo Noah, Sarvary Miklos
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Columbia University, New York, USA.
Int J Soc Robot. 2022;14(8):1865-1873. doi: 10.1007/s12369-022-00920-y. Epub 2022 Sep 12.
The uncanny valley hypothesis describes how people are often less comfortable with highly humanlike robots. However, this discomfort may vary cross-culturally. This research tests how increasing robots' physical and mental human likeness affects people's comfort with robots in the United States and Japan, countries whose cultural and religious contexts differ in ways that are relevant to the evaluation of humanlike robots. We find that increasing physical and mental human likeness decreases comfort among Americans but not among Japanese participants. One potential explanation for these differences it that Japanese participants perceived robots to be more animate, having more of a mind, a soul, and consciousness, relative to American participants.
恐怖谷假说描述了人们通常对高度类人的机器人不太自在的情况。然而,这种不适感可能因文化差异而有所不同。本研究测试了增加机器人的身体和心理类人性如何影响美国和日本民众对机器人的接受程度,这两个国家的文化和宗教背景在与类人机器人评估相关的方面存在差异。我们发现,增加身体和心理类人性会降低美国民众的接受度,但不会降低日本参与者的接受度。这些差异的一个潜在解释是,相对于美国参与者,日本参与者认为机器人更具生命力,更有思想、灵魂和意识。