Jastrzab Laura E, Chaudhury Bishakha, Ashley Sarah A, Koldewyn Kami, Cross Emily S
Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Human and Behavioural Science, Bangor University, Wales, UK.
Institute for Neuroscience and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
iScience. 2024 May 22;27(6):110070. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.110070. eCollection 2024 Jun 21.
We sought to replicate and expand previous work showing that the more human-like a robot appears, the more willing people are to attribute mind-like capabilities and socially engage with it. Forty-two participants played games against a human, a humanoid robot, a mechanoid robot, and a computer algorithm while undergoing functional neuroimaging. We confirmed that the more human-like the agent, the more participants attributed a mind to them. However, exploratory analyses revealed that the perceived of an agent appeared to be as, if not more, important for mind attribution. Our findings suggest top-down knowledge cues may be equally or possibly more influential than bottom-up stimulus cues when exploring mind attribution in non-human agents. While further work is now required to test this hypothesis directly, these preliminary findings hold important implications for robotic design and to understand and test the flexibility of human social cognition when people engage with artificial agents.
我们试图复制并扩展先前的研究成果,该成果表明机器人看起来越像人类,人们就越愿意赋予其类似心智的能力并与其进行社交互动。42名参与者在进行功能性神经成像时,分别与人类、类人机器人、机械机器人和计算机算法进行游戏。我们证实,代理越像人类,参与者就越会认为其具有心智。然而,探索性分析表明,对于心智归因而言,对代理的感知相似度即便不是更重要,似乎也同等重要。我们的研究结果表明,在探究对非人类代理的心智归因时,自上而下的知识线索可能与自下而上的刺激线索具有同等影响力,甚至可能更具影响力。虽然现在需要进一步的研究来直接验证这一假设,但这些初步发现对机器人设计以及理解和测试人们与人工代理互动时人类社会认知的灵活性具有重要意义。