Emotionally Expressive Robots: Implications for Children's Behavior toward Robot
Zibetti, Elisabetta, Palmer, Sureya Waheed, Stower, Rebecca, Anzalone, Salvatore M
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
The growing development of robots with artificial emotional expressiveness raises important questions about their persuasive potential in children's behavior. While research highlights the pragmatic value of emotional expressiveness in human social communi cation, the extent to which robotic expressiveness can or should influence empathic responses in children is grounds for debate. In a pilot study with 22 children (aged 7 - 11) we begin to explore the ways in which different levels of embodied expressiveness (body only, face only, body and face) of two basic emotions (happiness and sadness) displayed by an anthropomorphic robot (QTRobot) might modify children's behavior in a child - robot cooperative turn - taking game. We observed that children aligned their beh avior to the robot's inferred emotional state. However, higher levels of expressiveness did not result in increased alignment. The preliminary results reported here provide a starting point for reflecting on robotic expressiveness and its role in shaping c hildren's social - emotional behavior toward robots as social peers in the near future .
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Oct-1-2025
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.68)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area (0.47)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science > Emotion (0.95)
- Robots > Humanoid Robots (0.69)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence