Children's reliance on the non-verbal cues of a robot versus a human

Publication date

2019-01-01

Authors

Verhagen, JosjeISNI 0000000078544818
Van Den Berghe, RianneISNI 000000049279859X
Oudgenoeg‐Paz, OraORCID 0000-0003-4271-7504ISNI 0000000419517288
Küntay, Aylin C.ISNI 0000000524017576
Leseman, PaulISNI 0000000384213566

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Article
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Abstract

Robots are used for language tutoring increasingly often, and commonly programmed to display non-verbal communicative cues such as eye gaze and pointing during robot-child interactions. With a human speaker, children rely more strongly on non-verbal cues (pointing) than on verbal cues (labeling) if these cues are in conflict. However, we do not know how children weigh the non-verbal cues of a robot. Here, we assessed whether four- to six-year-old children (i) differed in their weighing of non-verbal cues (pointing, eye gaze) and verbal cues provided by a robot versus a human; (ii) weighed non-verbal cues differently depending on whether these contrasted with a novel or familiar label; and (iii) relied differently on a robot's non-verbal cues depending on the degree to which they attributed human-like properties to the robot. The results showed that children generally followed pointing over labeling, in line with earlier research. Children did not rely more strongly on the non-verbal cues of a robot versus those of a human. Regarding pointing, children who perceived the robot as more human-like relied on pointing more strongly when it contrasted with a novel label versus a familiar label, but children who perceived the robot as less human-like did not show this difference. Regarding eye gaze, children relied more strongly on the gaze cue when it contrasted with a novel versus a familiar label, and no effect of anthropomorphism was found. Taken together, these results show no difference in the degree to which children rely on non-verbal cues of a robot versus those of a human and provide preliminary evidence that differences in anthropomorphism may interact with children's reliance on a robot's non-verbal behaviors.

Keywords

General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, General

Citation

Verhagen, J, Van Den Berghe, R, Oudgenoeg-Paz, O, Küntay, A & Leseman, P 2019, 'Children's reliance on the non-verbal cues of a robot versus a human', PLoS One, vol. 14, no. 12, e0217833. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0217833