Location
Online
Event Website
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/
Start Date
3-1-2022 12:00 AM
End Date
7-1-2022 12:00 AM
Description
The present work investigated the effects of trust violations on perceptions and risk-taking behaviors, and how those effects differ in human-human versus human-machine collaborations. Participants were paired with either a human or machine teammate in a derivation of a well-known trust game. Therein, the teammate committed one of three qualitatively different trust violations (i.e., an ability-, benevolence-, or integrity-based violation of trust). The results showed that ability-based trust violations had the largest impact on perceptions of ability; the other trust violations did not have differential impacts on self-reported ability, benevolence, or integrity, or risk-taking behaviors, and none of these effects were qualified by being partnered with a human versus a robot. Additionally, humans engaged in more risk-taking behaviors when paired with a robotic partner compared to a human over time.
Trust Violations in Human-Human and Human-Robot Interactions: The Influence of Ability, Benevolence and Integrity Violations
Online
The present work investigated the effects of trust violations on perceptions and risk-taking behaviors, and how those effects differ in human-human versus human-machine collaborations. Participants were paired with either a human or machine teammate in a derivation of a well-known trust game. Therein, the teammate committed one of three qualitatively different trust violations (i.e., an ability-, benevolence-, or integrity-based violation of trust). The results showed that ability-based trust violations had the largest impact on perceptions of ability; the other trust violations did not have differential impacts on self-reported ability, benevolence, or integrity, or risk-taking behaviors, and none of these effects were qualified by being partnered with a human versus a robot. Additionally, humans engaged in more risk-taking behaviors when paired with a robotic partner compared to a human over time.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/hicss-55/cl/human-robot_interactions/3