Sensorimotor signaling is a key mechanism underlying coordination in humans. The increasing presence of artificial agents, including robots, in everyday contexts, will make joint action with them as common as a joint action with other humans. The present study investigates under which conditions sensorimotor signaling emerges when interacting with them. Human participants were asked to play a musical duet either with a humanoid robot or with an algorithm run on a computer. The artificial agent was programmed to commit errors. Those were either human-like (simulating a memory error) or machine-like (a repetitive loop of back-and-forth taps). At the end of the task, we tested the social inclusion toward the artificial partner by using a ball-tossing game. Our results showed that when interacting with the robot, participants showed lower variability in their performance when the error was human-like, relative to a mechanical failure. When the partner was an algorithm, the pattern was reversed. Social inclusion was affected by human-likeness only when the partner was a robot. Taken together, our findings showed that coordination with artificial agents, as well as social inclusion, are influenced by how human-like the agent appears, both in terms of morphological traits and in terms of behaviour.

Ciardo, F., De Tommaso, D., Wykowska, A. (2022). Joint action with artificial agents: Human-likeness in behaviour and morphology affects sensorimotor signaling and social inclusion. COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 132 [10.1016/j.chb.2022.107237].

Joint action with artificial agents: Human-likeness in behaviour and morphology affects sensorimotor signaling and social inclusion

Ciardo, F;
2022

Abstract

Sensorimotor signaling is a key mechanism underlying coordination in humans. The increasing presence of artificial agents, including robots, in everyday contexts, will make joint action with them as common as a joint action with other humans. The present study investigates under which conditions sensorimotor signaling emerges when interacting with them. Human participants were asked to play a musical duet either with a humanoid robot or with an algorithm run on a computer. The artificial agent was programmed to commit errors. Those were either human-like (simulating a memory error) or machine-like (a repetitive loop of back-and-forth taps). At the end of the task, we tested the social inclusion toward the artificial partner by using a ball-tossing game. Our results showed that when interacting with the robot, participants showed lower variability in their performance when the error was human-like, relative to a mechanical failure. When the partner was an algorithm, the pattern was reversed. Social inclusion was affected by human-likeness only when the partner was a robot. Taken together, our findings showed that coordination with artificial agents, as well as social inclusion, are influenced by how human-like the agent appears, both in terms of morphological traits and in terms of behaviour.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Human-artificial agents interaction; Joint action; Sensorimotor signaling; Social inclusion;
English
18-feb-2022
2022
132
107237
none
Ciardo, F., De Tommaso, D., Wykowska, A. (2022). Joint action with artificial agents: Human-likeness in behaviour and morphology affects sensorimotor signaling and social inclusion. COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 132 [10.1016/j.chb.2022.107237].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/463200
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