Submission 244
Seeing Minds in Machines: The Role of Emotion, Appearance, and Presumed Intentionality
SymposiumTalk-03
Presented by: Alexander Leonhardt
Interactions with artificial intelligence present a challenge for social cognition. Recent technological advances have meant that people engage with artificial agents more frequently, but also that the distinction between human and artificial intelligence is increasingly blurred. It is particularly challenging for people to understand whether they are interacting with a (mindless) machine or an intentional and social being. Several factors may decide in which category agents are placed. This talk focuses on the beholder’s share: to what extent do people attribute mind to artificial agents and how does available contextual information and people’s traits, beliefs and attitudes affect their perception and evaluation of such technology? I will present findings from two online and two laboratory experiments using EEG that investigated the differential impact of affective knowledge and implied intentionality on the attribution of mind and the moral-emotional evaluation of social robots. Results suggest that both factors affect early perceptual processes as well as moral and emotional judgments. Insights from these studies have implications for human-robot interaction and for ethical questions surrounding the introduction of artificial intelligence into social spheres.