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Perceived moral agency of non-moral entities: implications and future research directions for social robots

Perceived moral agency of non-moral entities: implications and future research directions for social robots
Perceived moral agency of non-moral entities: implications and future research directions for social robots
Humans tend to perceive human qualities in interactive systems. This particularly applies to social robots that utilise human attributes such as human body characteristics and natural language capabilities. Social robots with such characteristics are increasingly deployed in critical settings, such as health and well-being, where it is key to align robot behaviour with end-user expectations. Relatively little is known about how people perceive these social robots’ moral agency. In this position paper, we stress the difference between moral agency and perceived moral agency, and argue that the latter is a timely concern. We discuss the implications of perceived moral agency and outline research directions to explore how humans make sense of social robots in critical settings through perceived moral agency.
Wester, Joel
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Schneiders, Eike
9da80af0-1e27-4454-90e2-eb1abf7108bd
Berkel, Niels van
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Wester, Joel
0a350b2d-a13f-4a4e-9925-5dfb21a4bf06
Schneiders, Eike
9da80af0-1e27-4454-90e2-eb1abf7108bd
Berkel, Niels van
281a21e5-5a4c-499b-916f-1bd63898bb4b

Wester, Joel, Schneiders, Eike and Berkel, Niels van (2023) Perceived moral agency of non-moral entities: implications and future research directions for social robots. In HRI ’23: ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human- Robot Interaction (HRI).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Humans tend to perceive human qualities in interactive systems. This particularly applies to social robots that utilise human attributes such as human body characteristics and natural language capabilities. Social robots with such characteristics are increasingly deployed in critical settings, such as health and well-being, where it is key to align robot behaviour with end-user expectations. Relatively little is known about how people perceive these social robots’ moral agency. In this position paper, we stress the difference between moral agency and perceived moral agency, and argue that the latter is a timely concern. We discuss the implications of perceived moral agency and outline research directions to explore how humans make sense of social robots in critical settings through perceived moral agency.

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Published date: 16 March 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494611
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494611
PURE UUID: 1ae074c0-3a67-4165-b4dc-3b7f32165ec8
ORCID for Eike Schneiders: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8372-1684

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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2024 17:05
Last modified: 12 Oct 2024 03:07

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Contributors

Author: Joel Wester
Author: Eike Schneiders ORCID iD
Author: Niels van Berkel

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