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A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children

Infants' sensitivity to social or behavioral contingency has been examined in the field of developmental psychology and behavioral sciences, mainly using a double video paradigm or a still face paradigm. These studies have shown that infants distinguish other individuals' contingent behavi...

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Autores principales: Yamamoto, Kentaro, Tanaka, Saori, Kobayashi, Hiromi, Kozima, Hideki, Hashiya, Kazuhide
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2736370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19759818
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006974
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author Yamamoto, Kentaro
Tanaka, Saori
Kobayashi, Hiromi
Kozima, Hideki
Hashiya, Kazuhide
author_facet Yamamoto, Kentaro
Tanaka, Saori
Kobayashi, Hiromi
Kozima, Hideki
Hashiya, Kazuhide
author_sort Yamamoto, Kentaro
collection PubMed
description Infants' sensitivity to social or behavioral contingency has been examined in the field of developmental psychology and behavioral sciences, mainly using a double video paradigm or a still face paradigm. These studies have shown that infants distinguish other individuals' contingent behaviors from non-contingent ones. The present experiment systematically examined if this ability extends to the detection of non-humanoids' contingent actions in a communicative context. We examined two- to three-year-olds' understanding of contingent actions produced by a non-humanoid robot. The robot either responded contingently to the actions of the participants (contingent condition) or programmatically reproduced the same sequence of actions to another participant (non-contingent condition). The results revealed that the participants exhibited different patterns of response depending on whether or not the robot responded contingently. It was also found that the participants did not respond positively to the contingent actions of the robot in the earlier periods of the experimental sessions. This might reflect the conflict between the non-humanlike appearance of the robot and its humanlike contingent actions, which presumably led the children to experience the uncanny valley effect.
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spelling pubmed-27363702009-09-17 A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children Yamamoto, Kentaro Tanaka, Saori Kobayashi, Hiromi Kozima, Hideki Hashiya, Kazuhide PLoS One Research Article Infants' sensitivity to social or behavioral contingency has been examined in the field of developmental psychology and behavioral sciences, mainly using a double video paradigm or a still face paradigm. These studies have shown that infants distinguish other individuals' contingent behaviors from non-contingent ones. The present experiment systematically examined if this ability extends to the detection of non-humanoids' contingent actions in a communicative context. We examined two- to three-year-olds' understanding of contingent actions produced by a non-humanoid robot. The robot either responded contingently to the actions of the participants (contingent condition) or programmatically reproduced the same sequence of actions to another participant (non-contingent condition). The results revealed that the participants exhibited different patterns of response depending on whether or not the robot responded contingently. It was also found that the participants did not respond positively to the contingent actions of the robot in the earlier periods of the experimental sessions. This might reflect the conflict between the non-humanlike appearance of the robot and its humanlike contingent actions, which presumably led the children to experience the uncanny valley effect. Public Library of Science 2009-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2736370/ /pubmed/19759818 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006974 Text en Yamamoto et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yamamoto, Kentaro
Tanaka, Saori
Kobayashi, Hiromi
Kozima, Hideki
Hashiya, Kazuhide
A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title_full A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title_fullStr A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title_full_unstemmed A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title_short A Non-Humanoid Robot in the “Uncanny Valley”: Experimental Analysis of the Reaction to Behavioral Contingency in 2–3 Year Old Children
title_sort non-humanoid robot in the “uncanny valley”: experimental analysis of the reaction to behavioral contingency in 2–3 year old children
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2736370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19759818
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006974
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