IdeaBot:调查人机团队创造力中的社会促进作用

A. Hwang, A. S. Won
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引用次数: 19

摘要

本研究调查了人类受试者如何与计算机介导的聊天机器人在创造性想法生成任务中合作。在三个基于文本的组间研究中,我们测试了队友的感知身份(即,搭档是机器人还是人类)或对话风格(人类还是机器人)是否会调节参与者的创造性生产结果。在研究1中,参与者与聊天机器人或人类助手一起工作。在研究2中,所有的参与者都与一个人类队友一起工作,但被告知他们的搭档要么是人类,要么是聊天机器人。相反,在研究3中,所有参与者都与聊天机器人一起工作,但他们的伴侣要么被描述为聊天机器人,要么被描述为人类。我们调查了想法产生结果的差异,发现当参与者认为他们的团队合作伙伴是机器人时,他们总是能提供更多的想法和更高质量的想法。此外,当同伴的谈话风格是机器人式时,在小组交流中表现出高度焦虑的参与者在任务表现中表现出更高的创造性自我效能。最后,在任务过程中,搭档的主导地位和提出想法的压力是否会对想法产生的积极结果产生影响,取决于机器人搭档的对话风格是机器人式的还是人类式的。基于我们的研究结果,我们讨论了在协作任务中作为积极团队参与者的人工智能对未来设计的影响。
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IdeaBot: Investigating Social Facilitation in Human-Machine Team Creativity
The present study investigates how human subjects collaborate with a computer-mediated chatbot in creative idea generation tasks. In three text-based between-group studies, we tested whether the perceived identity (i.e., whether a partner was believed to be a bot or as a human) or conversational style (human or robotic) of a teammate would moderate the outcomes of participants’ creative production. In Study 1, participants worked with either a chatbot or a human confederate. In Study 2, all participants worked with a human teammate but were informed that their partner was either a human or a chatbot. Conversely, all participants worked with a chatbot in Study 3, but their partner was described as either a chatbot or a human. We investigated differences in idea generation outcomes and found that participants consistently contributed more ideas and ideas of higher quality when they perceived their teamworking partner to be a bot. Furthermore, when the conversational style of the partner was robotic, participants with high anxiety in group communication reported greater creative self-efficacy in task performance. Finally, whether the perceived dominance of a partner and the pressure to come up with ideas during the task mediated positive outcomes of idea generation depended on whether the conversational style of the bot partner was robot- or human-like. Based on our findings, we discussed implications for future design of artificial agents as active team players in collaboration tasks.
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