I saw it on YouTube! How online videos shape perceptions of mind, morality, and fears about robots
by , ,
Abstract:
Robots have the potential to transform our existing categorical distinctions between “property” and “persons.” Previous research has demonstrated that humans naturally anthropomorphize them, and this tendency may be amplified when a robot is subject to abuse. Simultaneously, robots give rise to hopes and fears about the future and our place in it. However, most available evidence on these mechanisms is either anecdotal, or based on a small number of laboratory studies with limited ecological validity. The present work aims to bridge this gap through examining responses of participants (N = 160) to four popular online videos of a leading robotics company (Boston Dynamics) and one more familiar vacuum cleaning robot (Roomba). Our results suggest that unexpectedly human-like abilities might provide more potent cues to mind perception than appearance, whereas appearance may attract more compassion and protection. Exposure to advanced robots significantly influences attitudes toward future artificial intelligence. We discuss the need for more research examining groundbreaking robotics outside the laboratory.
Reference:
I saw it on YouTube! How online videos shape perceptions of mind, morality, and fears about robots (Dennis Küster, Aleksandra Swiderska, David Gunkel), In New Media & Society, 2020.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{kuster_i_2020,
  title = {I saw it on {YouTube}! {How} online videos shape perceptions of mind, morality, and fears about robots},
  issn = {1461-4448, 1461-7315},
  url= {https://www.csl.uni-bremen.de/cms/images/documents/publications/Kuster_et_al_I_saw_it_on_YouTube.pdf},
  doi = {10.1177/1461444820954199},
  abstract = {Robots have the potential to transform our existing categorical distinctions between “property” and “persons.” Previous research has demonstrated that humans naturally anthropomorphize them, and this tendency may be amplified when a robot is subject to abuse. Simultaneously, robots give rise to hopes and fears about the future and our place in it. However, most available evidence on these mechanisms is either anecdotal, or based on a small number of laboratory studies with limited ecological validity. The present work aims to bridge this gap through examining responses of participants (N = 160) to four popular online videos of a leading robotics company (Boston Dynamics) and one more familiar vacuum cleaning robot (Roomba). Our results suggest that unexpectedly human-like abilities might provide more potent cues to mind perception than appearance, whereas appearance may attract more compassion and protection. Exposure to advanced robots significantly influences attitudes toward future artificial intelligence. We discuss the need for more research examining groundbreaking robotics outside the laboratory.},
  language = {en},
  urldate = {2020-09-21},
  journal = {New Media \& Society},
  author = {Küster, Dennis and Swiderska, Aleksandra and Gunkel, David},
  month = sep,
  year = {2020},
  pages = {146144482095419}
}