Mortality salience and the uncanny valley

It seems natural to assume that the more closely robots come to resemble people, the more likely they are to elicit the kinds of responses people direct toward each other. However, subtle flaws in appearance and movement only seem eerie in very human-like robots. This uncanny phenomenon may be sympt...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in5th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots, 2005 pp. 399 - 405
Main Author MacDorman, K.F.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 2005
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ISBN0780393201
9780780393202
ISSN2164-0572
DOI10.1109/ICHR.2005.1573600

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Summary:It seems natural to assume that the more closely robots come to resemble people, the more likely they are to elicit the kinds of responses people direct toward each other. However, subtle flaws in appearance and movement only seem eerie in very human-like robots. This uncanny phenomenon may be symptomatic of entities that elicit a model of a human other but do not measure up to it. If so, a very human-like robot may provide the best means of finding out what kinds of behavior are perceived as human, since deviations from a human other are more obvious. In pursuing this line of inquiry, it is essential to identify the mechanisms involved in evaluations of human likeness. One hypothesis is that an uncanny robot elicits an innate fear of death and culturally-supported defenses for coping with death's inevitability. An experiment, which borrows from the methods of terror management research, was performed to test this hypothesis. Across all questions subjects who were exposed to a still image of an uncanny humanlike robot had on average a heightened preference for worldview supporters and a diminished preference for worldview threats relative to the control group
ISBN:0780393201
9780780393202
ISSN:2164-0572
DOI:10.1109/ICHR.2005.1573600