Title
Gender differences in the impact of presentational factors in human character animation on decisions in ethical dilemmas
Abstract
Simulated humans in computer interfaces are increasingly taking on roles that were once reserved for real humans. The presentation of simulated humans is affected by their appearance, motion quality, and interactivity. These presentational factors can influence the decisions of those who interact with them. This is of concern to interface designers and users alike, because these decisions often have moral and ethical consequences. However, the impact of presentational factors on decisions in ethical dilemmas has not been explored. This study is intended as a first effort toward filling this gap. In a between-groups experiment, a female character presented participants with an ethical dilemma. The character's human photorealism and motion quality were varied to generate four stimulus conditions: real human versus computer-generated character × fluid versus jerky movement. The results indicate that the stimulus condition had no significant effect on female participants, while male participants were significantly more likely to rule against the character when her visual appearance was computer generated and her movements were jerky.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1162/pres.19.3.213
Presence
Keywords
Field
DocType
ethical dilemma,female participant,presentational factor,motion quality,ethical consequence,stimulus condition,female character,computer-generated character,gender difference,human character animation,simulated human,computer interface,character animation
Interactivity,Computer science,Simulation,Character animation,Stimulus (physiology),Presentational and representational acting,Ethical dilemma,Visual appearance
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
19
3
1054-7460
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
12
0.99
19
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Karl F. MacDorman180554.92
Joseph A. Coram2120.99
Chin-Chang Ho331720.37
Himalaya Patel4526.43