Research highlighted that Western and Eastern cultures differ in socio-cognitive mechanisms, such as social inclusion. Interestingly, social inclusion is a phenomenon that might transfer from human-human to human-robot relationships. Although the literature has shown that individual attitudes towards robots are shaped by cultural background, little research has investigated the role of cultural differences in the social inclusion of robots. In the present experiment, we investigated how cultural differences, in terms of nationality and individual cultural stance, influence social inclusion of the humanoid robot iCub, in a modified version of the Cyberball game, a classical experimental paradigm measuring social ostracism and exclusion mechanisms. Moreover, we investigated whether the individual tendency to attribute intentionality towards robots modulates the degree of inclusion of the iCub robot during the Cyberball game. Results suggested that the individuals’ stance towards collectivism and tendency to attribute a mind to robots both predicted the level of social inclusion of the iCub robot in our version of the Cyberball game.

Marchesi, S., Roselli, C., Wykowska, A. (2021). Cultural Values, but not Nationality, Predict Social Inclusion of Robots. In Social Robotics 13th International Conference, ICSR 2021, Singapore, Singapore November 10-13, 2021, Proceedings (pp.48-57). Springer [10.1007/978-3-030-90525-5_5].

Cultural Values, but not Nationality, Predict Social Inclusion of Robots

Roselli, Cecilia;
2021

Abstract

Research highlighted that Western and Eastern cultures differ in socio-cognitive mechanisms, such as social inclusion. Interestingly, social inclusion is a phenomenon that might transfer from human-human to human-robot relationships. Although the literature has shown that individual attitudes towards robots are shaped by cultural background, little research has investigated the role of cultural differences in the social inclusion of robots. In the present experiment, we investigated how cultural differences, in terms of nationality and individual cultural stance, influence social inclusion of the humanoid robot iCub, in a modified version of the Cyberball game, a classical experimental paradigm measuring social ostracism and exclusion mechanisms. Moreover, we investigated whether the individual tendency to attribute intentionality towards robots modulates the degree of inclusion of the iCub robot during the Cyberball game. Results suggested that the individuals’ stance towards collectivism and tendency to attribute a mind to robots both predicted the level of social inclusion of the iCub robot in our version of the Cyberball game.
paper
Collectivism; Cyberball; Human-Robot interaction; Mind attribution;
English
13th International Conference on Social Robotics, ICSR 2019 - November 10-13, 2021
2021
Li, H.; Ge, SS; Wu, Y; He, H; Liu, X; Li, D; Perez-Osorio, J
Social Robotics 13th International Conference, ICSR 2021, Singapore, Singapore November 10-13, 2021, Proceedings
9783030905248
2021
2021
13086 LNAI
48
57
none
Marchesi, S., Roselli, C., Wykowska, A. (2021). Cultural Values, but not Nationality, Predict Social Inclusion of Robots. In Social Robotics 13th International Conference, ICSR 2021, Singapore, Singapore November 10-13, 2021, Proceedings (pp.48-57). Springer [10.1007/978-3-030-90525-5_5].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/476339
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