Publication | Open Access
Anthropomorphism of Robots: Study of Appearance and Agency
47
Citations
39
References
2019
Year
Contrary to our expectations, participants were less willing to make humanlike attributions toward a robot when its morphology was more humanlike and were more willing to make those attributions when they were told that the robot was being remotely controlled by a person rather than acting on its own. In retrospect, these outcomes may have occurred because the humanoid robot used here had a smaller overall stature than the nonhumanoid robot, perhaps making it seem more toylike and because subjects made attributions toward the person behind the remote-controlled robot rather than toward the robot itself.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1