Journal Article10.1177/154193120504901311
Developing and Anthropomorphic Tendencies Scale
Matthew G. Chin,Ryan E. Yordon,Bryan R. Clark,Tatiana Ballion,Michael J. Dolezal,Randall Shumaker,Neal Finkelstein +6 more
- 01 Sep 2005
- Vol. 49, Iss: 13, pp 1266-1268
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TL;DR: A 208-item scale was developed to measure self-reported anthropomorphic tendencies during interactions with various non-human entities, including technology-laden machines such as computers, other objects such as backpacks, living things such as houseplants, and abstract entities such as a god or higher power as discussed by the authors.
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Abstract: A 208-item scale was developed to measure self-reported anthropomorphic tendencies during interactions with various non-human entities. The potential targets of anthropomorphism included technology-laden machines such as computers, other objects such as backpacks, living things such as houseplants, and abstract entities such as a god or higher power. Scale items assessed the degree to which participants agreed with statements regarding the perceived attributes of the entities, speech directed toward the entities and the treatment of the entities. A factor analysis suggested that the scale measures four independent types of anthropomorphism: “extreme” anthropomorphic tendencies, anthropomorphism of a god or higher power, anthropomorphism of pets, and “negative” anthropomorphism. Further analyses indicated that anthropomorphic tendencies were self-reported when pertaining to pets and a god or higher power. However, participants tended not to self-report inappropriate “negativeâ” anthropomorphism toward comp...
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Citations
Who Sees Human?: The Stability and Importance of Individual Differences in Anthropomorphism
TL;DR: This research provides a measure of stable individual differences in anthropomorphism that predicts three important consequences for everyday life: the degree of moral care and concern afforded to an agent, the amount of responsibility and trust placed on an agent and the extent to which an agent serves as a source of social influence on the self.
Texting with Humanlike Conversational Agents: Designing for Anthropomorphism
TL;DR: This work develops a theoretical framework for designing anthropomorphic CAs and demonstrates that not all combinations of anthropomorphic technology design cues increase perceived anthropomorphism, and advises on the direction research and practice should take to find the right spot in anthropomorphic CA design.
90
Inferring Capabilities of Intelligent Agents from Their External Traits
Bart P. Knijnenburg,Martijn C. Willemsen +1 more
- 19 Nov 2016
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the mental model users form of an agent-based system is inherently integrated (as opposed to the compositional mental model they form of conventional interfaces): Cues provided by the system do not instill user responses in a one-to-one matter but are instead integrated into a single mental model.
73
Perceived Intelligence and Perceived Anthropomorphism of Personal Intelligent Agents: Scale Development and Validation.
Sara Moussawi,Marios Koufaris +1 more
- 08 Jan 2019
TL;DR: This paper describes the process of developing two new measures with satisfactory psychometric properties that can be adapted by researchers to assess the users’ perceptions of intelligence and anthropomorphism of PIAs.
To Please in a Pod: Employing an Anthropomorphic Agent-Interlocutor to Enhance Trust and User Experience in an Autonomous, Self-Driving Vehicle
David R. Large,Kyle Harrington,Gary Burnett,Jacob Luton,Peter Thomas,Pete Bennett +5 more
- 21 Sep 2019
TL;DR: The study explores whether passengers in an autonomous vehicle display similar behaviour during transactions with an on-board conversational agent-interface; moreover, whether related attributes transcend to the vehicle itself.
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Measuring Individual Differences in Anthropomorphism toward Machines and Animals
Matthew G. Chin,Valerie K. Sims,Bryan R. Clark,Gabriel Rivera Lopez +3 more
- 01 Sep 2004
TL;DR: In this article, two scales were constructed to assess anthropomorphism during human-machine and human-animal interactions, and participants were asked about their tendencies to self-engage in anthropomorphic behaviors.
Faces in the Clouds: A New Theory of Religion
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide and defend a definition for the universal and most universal human phenomenon of religion, which is one of the most universal and studied human phenomena, yet there exists no widely shared definition for it.