PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

The clone devaluation effect: A new uncanny phenomenon concerning facial identity.

  • Fumiya Yonemitsu,
  • Kyoshiro Sasaki,
  • Akihiko Gobara,
  • Yuki Yamada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254396
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. e0254396

Abstract

Read online

Technological advances in robotics have already produced robots that are indistinguishable from human beings. This technology is overcoming the uncanny valley, which refers to the unpleasant feelings that arise from humanoid robots that are similar in appearance to real humans to some extent. If humanoid robots with the same appearance are mass-produced and become commonplace, we may encounter circumstances in which people or human-like products have faces with the exact same appearance in the future. This leads to the following question: what impressions do clones elicit? To respond to this question, we examined what impressions images of people with the same face (clone images) induce. In the six studies we conducted, we consistently reported that clone images elicited higher eeriness than individuals with different faces; we named this new phenomenon the clone devaluation effect. We found that the clone devaluation effect reflected the perceived improbability of facial duplication. Moreover, this phenomenon was related to distinguishableness of each face, the duplication of identity, the background scene in observing clone faces, and avoidance reactions based on disgust sensitivity. These findings suggest that the clone devaluation effect is a product of multiple processes related to memory, emotion, and face recognition systems.