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Can you count on a calculator? The role of agency and affect in judgments of robots as moral agents

Sari R. R. Nijssen, Barbara C. N. Müller, Tibor Bosse, Markus Paulus

2022Human-Computer Interaction30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Robots are becoming an integral part of society, and might soon take on roles involving making morally relevant decisions. In a pre-registered experiment (n = 184), we investigated which factors modulate the extent to which we trust a robot to make a moral choice. Specifically, the effects of anthropomorphic appearance and anthropomorphic agency and affect attributions were assessed. Participants were presented with moral dilemmas in which the individual having to make a decision was a humanoid or mechanical robot. Each robot was described in vignettes in which they were attributed with agency and/or affective states. Subsequently, participants’ implicit moral trust in the robot was measured, as well as explicit trust, perceived capability of the robot, and the extent to which they felt the robot was responsible for its choice. Both agency and affective state attributions were found to impact participants’ implicit and explicit trust as well as the perceived capability of the robot. Moreover, across conditions, mechanical robots were trusted significantly more than humanoid robots to take moral choices.

Topics & Concepts

AttributionAffect (linguistics)Agency (philosophy)Humanoid robotRobotMoral agencyPsychologySocial robotSocial psychologyCalculatorHuman–computer interactionCognitive psychologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceRobot controlMobile robotSociologyCommunicationOperating systemSocial sciencePsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentFree Will and AgencyDeath Anxiety and Social Exclusion
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