我还是人吗?穿戴外骨骼会影响对温暖、能力、吸引力和机器相似性的自我认知

Sandra Maria Siedl, Martina Mara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

职业外骨骼是一种佩戴在身上的技术,能够增强佩戴者在工作中的自然力量。尽管人们对它们的物理效果越来越感兴趣,但它们对用户自我感知的影响却在很大程度上被忽视了。为了解决人们对增强体质技术的普遍担忧,我们的研究探讨了机器人外骨骼在现实世界中的使用如何影响穿戴者的机械非人化和对自我吸引力的感知。在一项主体内实验室实验中,n=119 名参与者在使用或不使用 Ironhand 主动手部外骨骼的情况下完成了各种实际工作任务(搬运、拧螺丝、铆接)。每种情况结束后,他们都要填写一份问卷。我们预计,在使用外骨骼的情况下,自我感觉温暖和有吸引力的程度会降低,而自我感觉称职和像机器的程度会提高。研究数据支持了这些假设,并表明能力感知、机器感知和吸引力感知与技术接受度相关。我们的研究结果首次证明了身体增强技术可能与自我非人化倾向有关,并强调了外骨骼引发的能力增强的多方面作用。通过研究与机械非人化和美学吸引力相关的用户自我感知,我们的研究强调了更好地理解外骨骼对人类穿戴者心理影响的必要性。
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Am I still human? Wearing an exoskeleton impacts self-perceptions of warmth, competence, attractiveness, and machine-likeness

Occupational exoskeletons are body-worn technologies capable of enhancing a wearer's naturally given strength at work. Despite increasing interest in their physical effects, their implications for user self-perception have been largely overlooked. Addressing common concerns about body-enhancing technologies, our study explored how real-world use of a robotic exoskeleton affects a wearer's mechanistic dehumanization and perceived attractiveness of the self. In a within-subjects laboratory experiment, n = 119 participants performed various practical work tasks (carrying, screwing, riveting) with and without the Ironhand active hand exoskeleton. After each condition, they completed a questionnaire. We expected that in the exoskeleton condition self-perceptions of warmth and attractiveness would be less pronounced and self-perceptions of being competent and machine-like would be more pronounced. Study data supported these hypotheses and showed perceived competence, machine-likeness, and attractiveness to be relevant to technology acceptance. Our findings provide the first evidence that body-enhancement technologies may be associated with tendencies towards self-dehumanization, and underline the multifaceted role of exoskeleton-induced competence gain. By examining user self-perceptions that relate to mechanistic dehumanization and aesthetic appeal, our research highlights the need to better understand psychological impacts of exoskeletons on human wearers.

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