Title
Death of a Robot - Social Media Reactions and Language Usage when a Robot Stops Operating.
Abstract
People take to social media to share their thoughts, joys, and sorrows. A recent popular trend has been to support and mourn people and pets that have died as well as other objects that have suffered catastrophic damage. As several popular robots have been discontinued, including the Opportunity Rover, Jibo, and Kuri, we are interested in how language used to mourn these robots compares to that to mourn people, animals, and other objects. We performed a study in which we asked participants to categorize deidentified Twitter reactions as referencing the death of a person, an animal, a robot, or another object. Most reactions were labeled as being about humans, which suggests that people use similar language to describe feelings for animate and inanimate entities. We used a natural language toolkit to analyze language from a larger set of tweets. A majority of tweets about Opportunity included second-person ("you") and gendered third-person pronouns (she/he versus it), but terms like "R.I.P" were reserved almost exclusively for humans and animals. Our findings suggest that people verbally mourn robots similarly to living things, but reserve some language for people.
Year
DOI
Venue
2020
10.1145/3319502.3374794
HRI
Keywords
DocType
ISSN
Human computer interaction,Social networking (online),Animals,Natural languages,Blogs,Human-robot interaction,Market research
Conference
2167-2121
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4503-6746-2
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Elizabeth J. Carter162.77
Samantha Reig282.82
Xiang Zhi Tan3616.92
Gierad Laput447125.01
Stephanie Rosenthal527724.03
Aaron Steinfeld648646.01