Don't look now: How a robot's gaze can affect the human brain
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[September 02, 2021]
By Stuart McDill
(Reuters) - It has long been known that
making eye contact with a robot can be an unsettling experience.
Scientists even have a name for the queasy feeling: the "uncanny
valley".
Now, thanks to researchers in Italy, we also know it's more than just a
feeling.
A team at the Istituto Italiano Di Tecnologia (IIT) in Genoa have shown
how a robot's gaze can trick us into thinking we are socially
interacting and slow our ability to make decisions.
"Gaze is an extremely important social signal that we employ on a
day-to-day basis when interacting with others," said Professor Agnieszka
Wykowska, lead author of the research, published on Wednesday in the
journal Science Robots.
"The question is whether the robot gaze will evoke very similar
mechanisms in the human brain as another human's gaze would."
The team asked 40 volunteers to play a video game of "chicken" - where
each player has to decide whether to allow a car to drive straight
towards another car or to deviate to avoid a collision - against a
humanoid robot sitting opposite them.
Between rounds players had to look at the robot, which would sometimes
look back and other times look away.
In each scenario, the scientists collected data on behaviour and neural
activity via electroencephalography (EEG), which detects electrical
activity in the brain.
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The head of Ai-Da, a humanoid robot capable of drawing people from
life using her bionic eyes and hand, is seen in the offices of
robotics company Engineered Arts, in Falmouth, Cornwall, Britain
February 7, 2019. REUTERS/Matthew Stock/File Photo
"Our results show that, actually, the human brain
processes the robot gaze as a social signal, and that signal has an
impact on the way we're making decisions, on the strategies we
deploy in the game and also on our responses," Wykowska said.
"The mutual gaze of the robot affected decisions by delaying them,
so humans were much slower in making the decisions in the game."
The findings have implications on where and how humanoid robots are
deployed in future.
"Once we understand when robots elicit social attunement, then we
can decide it which sort of context this is desirable and beneficial
for humans and in which context this should not occur," said
Wykowska.
According to a report by the International Federation of Robotics,
worldwide sales of professional service robots had already jumped
32% to $11.2 billion between 2018 and 2019.
(Reporting by Stuart McDill; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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