Literature DB >> 36097596

Is It Personal? The Impact of Personally Relevant Robotic Failures (PeRFs) on Humans' Trust, Likeability, and Willingness to Use the Robot.

Romi Gideoni1, Shanee Honig1, Tal Oron-Gilad1.   

Abstract

In three laboratory experiments, we examine the impact of personally relevant failures (PeRFs) on users' perceptions of a collaborative robot. PeR is determined by how much a specific issue applies to a particular person, i.e., it affects one's own goals and values. We hypothesized that PeRFs would reduce trust in the robot and the robot's Likeability and Willingness to Use (LWtU) more than failures that are not personal to participants. To achieve PeR in human-robot interaction, we utilized three different manipulation mechanisms: (A) damage to property, (B) financial loss, and (C) first-person versus third-person failure scenarios. In total, 132 participants engaged with a robot in person during a collaborative task of laundry sorting. All three experiments took place in the same experimental environment, carefully designed to simulate a realistic laundry sorting scenario. Results indicate that the impact of PeRFs on perceptions of the robot varied across the studies. In experiments A and B, the encounters with PeRFs reduced trust significantly relative to a no failure session. But not entirely for LWtU. In experiment C, the PeR manipulation had no impact. The work highlights challenges and adjustments needed for studying robotic failures in laboratory settings. We show that PeR manipulations affect how users perceive a failing robot. The results bring about new questions regarding failure types and their perceived severity on users' perception of the robot. Putting PeR aside, we observed differences in the way users perceive interaction failures compared (experiment C) to how they perceive technical ones (A and B).
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. 2022, Springer Nature or its licensor holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bystanders; Financial loss; Personal relevance; Property damage; Robot failures; Trust

Year:  2022        PMID: 36097596      PMCID: PMC9452279          DOI: 10.1007/s12369-022-00912-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Soc Robot        ISSN: 1875-4791            Impact factor:   3.802


  6 in total

1.  The Toronto Empathy Questionnaire: scale development and initial validation of a factor-analytic solution to multiple empathy measures.

Authors:  R Nathan Spreng; Margaret C McKinnon; Raymond A Mar; Brian Levine
Journal:  J Pers Assess       Date:  2009-01

2.  Positive Emotions, More Than Anxiety or Other Negative Emotions, Predict Willingness to Interact With Robots.

Authors:  Eliot R Smith; Steven Sherrin; Marlena R Fraune; Selma Šabanović
Journal:  Pers Soc Psychol Bull       Date:  2020-01-20

3.  Yours or mine? Ownership and memory.

Authors:  Sheila J Cunningham; David J Turk; Lynda M Macdonald; C Neil Macrae
Journal:  Conscious Cogn       Date:  2007-05-31

4.  The impact of personal relevance on emotion processing: evidence from event-related potentials and pupillary responses.

Authors:  Mareike Bayer; Katja Ruthmann; Annekathrin Schacht
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 3.436

Review 5.  Understanding and Resolving Failures in Human-Robot Interaction: Literature Review and Model Development.

Authors:  Shanee Honig; Tal Oron-Gilad
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-06-15
  6 in total

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