Title

Go, Dog, Go: Maze Training Aibo Vs. A Live Dog, An Exploratory Study

Keywords

AIBO; Attribution; Dog; Mood; Robotic; Vocal

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate differences in interaction and attribution when participants directed either a robotic dog (AIBO) or a live dog. Twenty-nine participants (20 female, 9 male) directed one of the two entities, a live dog or AIBO, through a complex maze from a remote location by providing voice commands. Participants were given identical feedback regarding the entity's performance during the maze task. While directing the dog or AIBO through the maze, participants rated their own moods. Following the maze task, participants rated the dog or AIBO on a variety of attributes. Vocal data were analyzed for content and fundamental frequency. Results indicate that although vocal content and mood ratings did not differ when participants interacted with the dog versus AIBO, fundamental frequency was higher when participants talked to the dog rather than the AIBO. The dog and AIBO were also rated differently on several attributes after the maze task. Overall, the results suggest that human responses during interactions with live and robotic animals can be superficially similar, yet distinctly different when examined at a deeper level. © ISAZ 2008 PRINTED IN THE UK.

Publication Date

3-1-2008

Publication Title

Anthrozoos

Volume

21

Issue

1

Number of Pages

71-83

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.2752/089279308X274074

Socpus ID

41449113694 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/41449113694

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