Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
400900 International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 2013 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recent studies have demonstrated that people show social reactions when interacting with human-like virtual agents. For instance, human users behave in a socially desirable way, show increased cooperation or apply human-like communication. It has, however, so far not been tested whether users are prone to mimic the artificial agent’s behavior although this is a widely cited phenomenon of human–human communication that seems to be especially indicative of the sociality of the situation. We therefore conducted an experiment, in which we analyzed whether humans reciprocate an agent’s smile. In a between-subjects design, 104 participants conducted an 8-min small-talk conversation with an agent that either did not smile, showed occasional smiles, or displayed frequent smiles. Results show that although smiling did not have a distinct impact on the evaluation of the agent, the human interaction partners themselves smiled longer when the agent was smiling.

► Results show that participants smile more when a virtual agent smiles more. ► Paper provides a rich theoretical background on social effects of embodied virtual agents. ► Whether mimicry can be responsible for the phenomena is discussed thoroughly.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Artificial Intelligence
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