Pupillary responses to robotic and human emotions: the uncanny valley and media equation confirmed

Anna Johanna Carola Reuten, Maureen van Dam , Marnix Naber*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Physiological responses during human–robots interaction are useful alternatives to subjective measures of uncanny feelings for nearly humanlike robots (uncanny valley) and comparable emotional responses between humans and robots (media equation). However, no studies have employed the easily accessible measure of pupillometry to confirm the uncanny valley and media equation hypotheses, evidence in favor of the existence of these hypotheses in interaction with emotional robots is scarce, and previous studies have not controlled for low level image statistics across robot appearances. We therefore recorded pupil size of 40 participants that viewed and rated pictures of robotic and human faces that expressed a variety of basic emotions. The robotic faces varied along the dimension of human likeness from cartoonish to humanlike. We strictly controlled for confounding factors by removing backgrounds, hair, and color, and by equalizing low level image statistics. After the presentation phase, participants indicated to what extent the robots appeared uncanny and humanlike, and whether they could imagine social interaction with the robots in real life situations. The results show that robots rated as nearly humanlike scored higher on uncanniness, scored lower on imagined social interaction, evoked weaker pupil dilations, and their emotional expressions were more difficult to recognize. Pupils dilated most strongly to negative expressions and the pattern of pupil responses across emotions was highly similar between robot and human stimuli. These results highlight the usefulness of pupillometry in emotion studies and robot design by confirming the uncanny valley and media equation hypotheses.
Original languageEnglish
Article number774
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume9
Issue numberMAY
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Robots
  • Emotion
  • Pupil
  • Facial expressions
  • Social acceptance

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