Title
The effect of social-cognitive recovery strategies on likability, capability and trust in social robots.
Abstract
As robots become more prevalent, particularly in complex public and domestic settings, they will be increasingly challenged by dynamic situations that could result in performance errors. Such errors can have a harmful impact on a user's trust and confidence in the technology, potentially reducing use and preventing full realization of its benefits. A potential countermeasure, based on social psychological concepts of trust, is for robots to demonstrate self-awareness and ownership of their mistakes to mitigate the impact of errors and increase users' affinity towards the robot. We describe an experiment examining 326 people's perceptions of a mobile guide robot that employs synthetic social behaviours to elicit trust in its use after error. We find that a robot that identifies its mistake, and communicates its intention to rectify the situation, is considered by observers to be more capable than one that simply apologizes for its mistake. However, the latter is considered more likeable and, uniquely, increases people's intention to use the robot. These outcomes highlight that the complex and multifaceted nature of trust in human-robot interaction may extend beyond established approaches considering robots' capability in performance and indicate that social cognitive models are valuable in developing trustworthy synthetic social agents.
Year
DOI
Venue
2021
10.1016/j.chb.2020.106561
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
Keywords
DocType
Volume
Human-robot interaction,Social robotics,Trust,User experience
Journal
114
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
0747-5632
1
0.37
References 
Authors
0
8
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
David Cameron110.37
Stevienna de Saille210.37
Emily C. Collins3368.51
Jonathan M. Aitken4266.92
Hugo Cheung510.37
Adriel Chua610.37
Ee Jing Loh710.37
James Law891.84