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What is a Human? - Toward Psychological Benchmarks in the Field of Human-Robot Interaction

Peter H. Kahn, Hiroshi Ishiguro, Batya Friedman, Takayuki Kanda

Year
2006
Citations
158

Abstract

In this paper, we move toward offering psychological benchmarks by which to measure success in building increasingly human-like robots. By psychological benchmarks we mean categories of interaction that capture conceptually fundamental aspects of human life, specified abstractly enough so as to resist their identity as a mere psychological instrument, but capable of being translated into testable empirical propositions. Six possible benchmarks are considered: autonomy, imitation, intrinsic moral value, moral accountability, privacy, and reciprocity. Finally, we discuss how getting the right group of benchmarks in human-robot interaction will, in future years, help inform on the foundational question of what constitutes essential features of being human

Keywords

AutonomyReciprocity (cultural anthropology)Human–robot interactionImitationRobotAccountabilityComputer scienceField (mathematics)Human–computer interactionPsychology

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