Infants' psychophysiological responses to eye contact with a human and with a humanoid robot.

Journal: Biological psychology
PMID:

Abstract

Eye contact with a human and with a humanoid robot elicits attention- and affect-related psychophysiological responses. However, these responses have mostly been studied in adults, leaving their developmental origin poorly understood. In this study, 114 infants (6-8 months old) viewed direct and averted gaze directions of a live human and an embodied humanoid robot while their heart rate deceleration (attention orienting), skin conductance (affective arousal), and facial muscle activity (affective valence) were measured. In addition, a non-humanoid object (a vase) was used as a control stimulus. Infants' attention orienting was stronger to averted versus direct gaze of a human and a robot, but indifferent to the averted versus direct orientation of the non-humanoid object. Moreover, infants' attention orienting was equally intensive toward a human and a robot, but less intensive toward a non-humanoid object. Affective arousal was insensitive to gaze direction and did not differ between the human, the robot, and the non-humanoid object. Facial muscle responses showed sensitivity to the gaze direction of a human and of a robot but not to the orientation of the non-humanoid object. These results suggest that infants recognize the attentional and affective/affiliative significance not only in a human's gaze but also in a robot's gaze.

Authors

  • Samuli Linnunsalo
    Human Information Processing Laboratory, Faculty of Social Sciences/Psychology, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland. Electronic address: samuli.linnunsalo@tuni.fi.
  • Santeri Yrttiaho
    Human Information Processing Laboratory, Faculty of Social Sciences/Psychology, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland.
  • Chiara Turati
    Department of Psychology, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
  • Ermanno Quadrelli
    Department of Psychology, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
  • Mikko J Peltola
    Human Information Processing Laboratory, Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, FI -33014, Tampere University, Finland.
  • Jari K Hietanen
    Human Information Processing Laboratory, Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, FI -33014, Tampere University, Finland. Electronic address: jari.hietanen@tuni.fi.