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A truly human interface: interacting face-to-face with someone whose words are determined by a computer program

Corti, Kevin and Gillespie, Alex ORCID: 0000-0002-0162-1269 (2015) A truly human interface: interacting face-to-face with someone whose words are determined by a computer program. Frontiers in Psychology, 6 (634). ISSN 1664-1078

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Identification Number: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00634

Abstract

We use speech shadowing to create situations wherein people converse in person with a human whose words are determined by a conversational agent computer program. Speech shadowing involves a person (the shadower) repeating vocal stimuli originating from a separate communication source in real-time. Humans shadowing for conversational agent sources (e.g., chat bots) become hybrid agents (“echoborgs”) capable of face-to-face interlocution. We report three studies that investigated people’s experiences interacting with echoborgs and the extent to which echoborgs pass as autonomous humans. First, participants in a Turing Test spoke with a chat bot via either a text interface or an echoborg. Human shadowing did not improve the chat bot’s chance of passing but did increase interrogators’ ratings of how human-like the chat bot seemed. In our second study, participants had to decide whether their interlocutor produced words generated by a chat bot or simply pretended to be one. Compared to those who engaged a text interface, participants who engaged an echoborg were more likely to perceive their interlocutor as pretending to be a chat bot. In our third study, participants were naïve to the fact that their interlocutor produced words generated by a chat bot. Unlike those who engaged a text interface, the vast majority of participants who engaged an echoborg did not sense a robotic interaction. These findings have implications for android science, the Turing Test paradigm, and human–computer interaction. The human body, as the delivery mechanism of communication, fundamentally alters the social psychological dynamics of interactions with machine intelligence.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: http://journal.frontiersin.org/journal/psychology
Additional Information: © 2015 The Authors © CC BY 4.0
Divisions: Psychological and Behavioural Science
Subjects: B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology
T Technology > T Technology (General)
Date Deposited: 26 Jun 2015 11:53
Last Modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:04
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/62496

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