Publication | Open Access
The power of head tilts: gender and cultural differences of perceived human vs human-like robot smile in service
113
Citations
67
References
2019
Year
Customer SatisfactionAffective DesignSocially Assistive RobotSocial SciencesPsychologyGender StudiesEmbodied RoboticsAffect PerceptionSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesHuman Agent InteractionUser ExperienceSocial CognitionHead TiltsHead InclinationsPerformance StudiesCultural DifferencesSocial BehaviorHead TiltPersonal RobotHuman-computer InteractionArtsEmotionNonverbal Communication
Purpose The purpose of this study is to understand the perceptual differences toward smiling behaviors with head inclinations displaying by the human-like robot staff and human staff in a service setting. Design/methodology/approach This study adopted a 2 (staff: robot/human personal personnel) × 3 (head tilt: left/right/straight) full factorial design, while cross-examining participants’ cultural dimensions 2 (power distance: high/lower) × 2 (gender: male/female) during the service encounter. Findings Overall, it was found that male and female customers with different cultural background would perceive robot and human personnel with varying degrees of head tilt very differently, namely, regarding interpersonal warmth but not customer satisfaction. Originality/value Nonverbal cues serve as important elements in the interaction. This paper provides new directions on the design of anthropomorphic robot and gives insight to people’s perceptual differences. All in all, the present study is useful in facilitating human–robot interactions.
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