Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
1 Μαρ 2023 · Bukimi no tani (uncanny valley) graph showing the human-likeness vs. affinity curve. The solid line represents non-moving agents, while moving agents are shown with the dotted line. The sharp dip (through) in affinity below the x-axis indicates the uncanny valley that is shown to be more pronounced for moving than non-moving agents ...
- White Matter Pathways and Social Cognition
There is a growing consensus that social cognition and...
- Can We Talk to Robots? Ten-month-old Infants Expected Interactive Humanoid Robots to Be Talked to by Persons
Developmental psychology has addressed the issue of how...
- White Matter Pathways and Social Cognition
The uncanny valley effect denotes a dip in the positive relation between a robot's human likeness and likeability. This paper provides first evidence that this design-guiding effect is not limited to humanoids, but extends to zoomorphic robots. In a ...
28 Οκτ 2016 · Using a hypothetical graph, Masahiro Mori proposed in 1970 the relation between the human likeness of robots and other anthropomorphic characters and an observer’s affective or emotional appraisal of them. The relation is positive apart from a U -shaped region known as the uncanny valley.
16 Νοε 2012 · Metrics. Abstract. There are a number of psychological phenomena in which dramatic emotional responses are evoked by seemingly innocuous perceptual stimuli. A well known example is the ‘uncanny...
Uncanny valley refers to humans’ negative reaction to almost-but-not-quite-human agents. Theoretical work proposes prediction violation as an explanation for uncanny valley but no empirical work has directly tested it. Here, we provide evidence that supports this theory using event-related brain potential recordings from the human scalp.
1 Ιουλ 2019 · Scientists from Fabian Grabenhorst's group have identified mechanisms in the human brain that could help explain the phenomenon of the ‘Uncanny Valley’ – the unsettling feeling we get from robots and virtual agents that are too human-like.
Abstract. Using a hypothetical graph, Masahiro Mori pro-posed in 1970 the relation between the human likeness of robots and other anthropomorphic characters and an observer’s affective or emotional appraisal of them. The relation is positive apart from a U-shaped region known as the uncanny valley.