Ties That Bind: Group Effects in Human-Robot Team Interaction in Japan and the United States
Past research with participants in the United States showed that, in competitive group tasks, they have more positive attitudes and behaviors toward robots on their team over humans in another team. Here we present a study in which two Japanese students and two robots, placed in a randomly assigned group, compete with another student-and-robot team in a digital game. We explored participants’ moral behavior towards the robots, measured through their assignment of loud noise blasts to human and robot participants, and their perceptions of and attitudes towards the robots. We then compared this data to that which was collected within the United States. Results indicated that participants in Japan favored their ingroup humans and robots over outgroup agents and differentiated ingroup members more than outgroup members, as within the US. Japanese participants also anthropomorphized robots more than US participants and treated them more positively than US participants.