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Robots have the potential to save lives in emergency scenarios, but could have an equally disastrous effect if participants overtrust them. To explore this concept, we performed an experiment where a participant interacts with a robot in a non-emergency task to experience its behavior and then chooses whether to follow the robot's instructions in an emergency or not. Artificial smoke and fire alarms were used to add a sense of urgency. To our surprise, all 26 participants followed the robot in the emergency, despite half observing the same robot perform poorly in a navigation guidance task just minutes before. We performed additional exploratory studies investigating different failure modes. Even when the robot pointed to a dark room with no discernible exit the majority of people did not choose to safely exit the way they entered.
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Robinette et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d6aba5abefa4d4d4aa7ec4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/hri.2016.7451740
Paul Robinette
Wenchen Li
Robert B. Allen
Georgia Institute of Technology
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