期刊论文详细信息
iScience
Heuristic thinking and altruism toward machines in people impacted by COVID-19
Jonathan Gratch1  Celso M. de Melo2  Frank Krueger3 
[1]Corresponding author
[2]CCDC U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Playa Vista, CA 90094, USA
[3]USC Institute for Creative Technologies, Playa Vista, CA 90094, USA
关键词: Computer Science;    Human-Computer Interaction;    Sociology;   
DOI  :  
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】
Summary: Autonomous machines are poised to become pervasive, but most treat machines differently: we are willing to violate social norms and less likely to display altruism toward machines. Here, we report an unexpected effect that those impacted by COVID-19—as measured by a post-traumatic stress disorder scale—show a sharp reduction in this difference. Participants engaged in the dictator game with humans and machines and, consistent with prior research on disasters, those impacted by COVID-19 displayed more altruism to other humans. Unexpectedly, participants impacted by COVID-19 displayed equal altruism toward human and machine partners. A mediation analysis suggests that altruism toward machines was explained by an increase in heuristic thinking—reinforcing prior theory that heuristic thinking encourages people to treat machines like people—and faith in technology—perhaps reflecting long-term consequences on how we act with machines. These findings give insight, but also raise concerns, for the design of technology.
【 授权许可】

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