Investigating cooperation with robotic peers.

Journal: PloS one
PMID:

Abstract

We explored how people establish cooperation with robotic peers, by giving participants the chance to choose whether to cooperate or not with a more/less selfish robot, as well as a more or less interactive, in a more or less critical environment. We measured the participants' tendency to cooperate with the robot as well as their perception of anthropomorphism, trust and credibility through questionnaires. We found that cooperation in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) follows the same rule of Human-Human Interaction (HHI), participants rewarded cooperation with cooperation, and punished selfishness with selfishness. We also discovered two specific robotic profiles capable of increasing cooperation, related to the payoff. A mute and non-interactive robot is preferred with a high payoff, while participants preferred a more human-behaving robot in conditions of low payoff. Taken together, these results suggest that proper cooperation in HRI is possible but is related to the complexity of the task.

Authors

  • Debora Zanatto
    School of Computing, Electronics, and Mathematics, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, United Kingdom.
  • Massimiliano Patacchiola
    Centre for Robotics and Neural Systems, School of Computing and Mathematics, University of Plymouth, UK.
  • Jeremy Goslin
    School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, United Kingdom.
  • Angelo Cangelosi
    Faculty of Science and Engineering, The University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.