Publication | Open Access
Two is better than one: Social rewards from two agents enhance offline improvements in motor skills more than single agent
37
Citations
35
References
2020
Year
Motor LearningEngineeringMotor SkillHuman-machine InteractionSocially Assistive RobotMotor ControlPsychologyHumanrobot CollaborationSkilled PerformanceSocial Learning TheoryHealth SciencesSocial RewardsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceMotor SkillsSocial SkillsHuman Agent InteractionSingle AgentSocial BehaviorSocial ComputingHuman Motor SkillsHuman-computer Interaction
Social rewards as praise from others enhance offline improvements in human motor skills. Does praise from artificial beings, e.g., computer-graphics-based agents (displayed agents) and robots (collocated agents), also enhance offline improvements in motor skills as effectively as praise from humans? This paper answers this question via two subsequent days' experiment. We investigated the effect of the number of agents and their sense of presence toward offline improvement in motor skills because they are essential factors to change social effects and people's behaviors in human-agent and human-robot interaction. Our 96 participants performed a finger-tapping task. Our results showed that those who received praise from two agents showed significantly better offline motor skill improvement than people who were praised by just one agent and those who received no praise. However, we identified no significant effects related to the sense of presence.
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