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Translated by Karl F. MacDorman and Norri Kageki. Editor's note: More than 40 years ago, Masahiro Mori, then a robotics professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, wrote an essay on how he envisioned people's reactions to robots that looked and acted almost human.
This is the first publication of an English translation that has been authorized and reviewed by Mori and explored its implications for human-robot interaction and computer-graphics animation, while others have investigated its biological and social roots. Expand. web.ics.purdue.edu. Save to Library. Create Alert.
1 Ιουν 2012 · The present study investigated the uncanny valley by measuring observers' impressions of facial images whose degree of realism was manipulated by morphing between artificial and real human...
1 Δεκ 2015 · The uncanny valley hypothesis describes how increased human-likeness of artificial entities, ironically, could elicit a surge of negative reactions from people.
The Uncanny Valley. Editor’s note: More than 40 years ago, Masahiro Mori, a robotics professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, wrote an essay [1] on how he envisioned people’s reactions to robots that looked and acted almost like a human.
interested in the uncanny valley and its implications for the design and use of humanlike robots. Her dissertation (Understanding the Uncanny: The Effects of Human Similarity on Aversion towards Humanlike Robots) advances uncanny valley theory and introduces a novel protocol for evaluating human-robot interactions. Abstract
The term ‘uncanny valley’ is attributed to Masahiro Mori, a robotics professor who used the phrase in the 1970s to describe the psychological zone where humans become uncomfortable with robots and artificial intelligence’s proximity to the human, either visually or behaviourally.