Development of the Beliefs in Human Nature Uniqueness Scale and Its Associations With Perception of Social Robots
2024; Wiley; Volume: 2024; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1155/2024/5569587
ISSN2578-1863
AutoresJean‐Christophe Giger, Nuno Piçarra, Grzegorz Pochwatko, N. S. de Almeida, Ana Susana Almeida, Neuza Costa,
Tópico(s)Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion
ResumoThere is an actual trend for humanizing technological artifacts, especially social robots. However, human‐like social robots trigger negative attitudes by threatening human uniqueness as well as humanness. The present paper presents the development of the Belief in Human Nature Uniqueness Scale (BHNUS) to assess the individual tendency to deny social robots the possibility to have human features considered to be the hallmarks of humanness. The validation of the BHNUS was completed along seven studies, with a total of 1044 Portuguese participants. Results showed that BHNUS had good structural qualities (Studies 1 and 2), as well as good convergent and discriminant validities. BHNUS was correlated with negative attitudes towards robots, religiosity, and interest for science fiction (Study 3), attribution of traits of warmth to robots (Study 4), positive and negative emotional appraisal (Study 5), perspective taking (Study 6), and attitudes towards the development of robots with human features (Study 7). The importance of the BHNUS regarding the development of social robots and human–robot interaction is discussed. If you were to insist I was a robot, you might not consider me capable of love in some mystic human sense, but you would not be able to distinguish my reactions from that which you would call love so what difference would it make? Isaac Asimov (1982) in Foundation’s Edge, p. 420
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