Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Robots" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 The Era of Humanoid Robots: Addressing Emerging End-of-Life Waste Challenges Wang Z; Chen Z; Sajedi S; Deng S; An C; 41804291
ENCS
2 Adaptive finite-time synchronized control of multi-robotic fiber placement system with model uncertainties and disturbances Zhang R; Wang Y; Xie W; Li P; Tan H; Jiang Y; 40461302
ENCS
3 Children s attribution of mental states to humans and social robots assessed with the Theory of Mind Scale Goldman EJ; Baumann AE; Pare L; Beaudoin J; Poulin-Dubois D; 40348850
PSYCHOLOGY
4 AAT4IRS: automated acceptance testing for industrial robotic systems Dos Santos MG; Hallé S; Petrillo F; Guéhéneuc YG; 39420929
ENCS
5 Children's anthropomorphism of inanimate agents Goldman EJ; Poulin-Dubois D; 38659105
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Do preschoolers trust a competent robot pointer? Baumann AE; Goldman EJ; Cobos MM; Poulin-Dubois D; 37804786
CONCORDIA
7 Preschoolers' anthropomorphizing of robots: Do human-like properties matter? Goldman EJ; Baumann AE; Poulin-Dubois D; 36814889
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Practical fixed-time trajectory tracking control of constrained wheeled mobile robots with kinematic disturbances Lu Q; Chen J; Wang Q; Zhang D; Sun M; Su CY; 35039151
ENCS
9 Foundations of Erobotics. Dubé S, Anctil D 33133302
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Do preschoolers trust a competent robot pointer?
Authors:Baumann AEGoldman EJCobos MMPoulin-Dubois D
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37804786/
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2023.105783
Publication:Journal of experimental child psychology
Keywords:AnimacyEpistemic characteristicsNaïve biologyRobotsSelective social learningSelective trustSocial characteristicsSocial learning
PMID:37804786 Category: Date Added:2023-10-08
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA

Description:

How young children learn from different informants has been widely studied. However, most studies investigate how children learn verbally conveyed information. Furthermore, most studies investigate how children learn from humans. This study sought to investigate how 3-year-old children learn from, and come to trust, a competent robot versus an incompetent human when competency is established using a pointing paradigm. During an induction phase, a robot informant pointed at a toy inside a transparent box, whereas a human pointed at an empty box. During the test phase, both agents pointed at opaque boxes. We found that young children asked the robot for help to locate a hidden toy more than the human (ask questions) and correctly identified the robot to be accurate (judgment questions). However, children equally endorsed the locations pointed at by both the robot and the human (endorse questions). This suggests that 3-year-olds are sensitive to the epistemic characteristics of the informant even when its displayed social properties are minimal.





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