Multimodal Technologies and Interaction (Jun 2020)

Japanese Young Women Did not Discriminate between Robots and Humans as Listeners for Their Self-Disclosure -Pilot Study-

  • Takahisa Uchida,
  • Hideyuki Takahashi,
  • Midori Ban,
  • Jiro Shimaya,
  • Takashi Minato,
  • Kohei Ogawa,
  • Yuichiro Yoshikawa,
  • Hiroshi Ishiguro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/mti4030035
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
p. 35

Abstract

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Disclosing personal matters to other individuals often contributes to the maintenance of our mental health and social bonding. However, in face-to-face situations, it can be difficult to prompt others to self-disclose because people often feel embarrassed disclosing personal matters to others. Although artificial agents without strong social pressure for listeners to induce self-disclosure is a promising engineering method that can be applied in daily stress management and reduce depression, gender difference is known to make a drastic difference of the attitude toward robots. We hypothesized that, as compared to men, women tend to prefer robots as a listener for their self-disclosure. The experimental results that are based on questionnaires and the actual self-disclosure behavior indicate that men preferred to self-disclose to the human listener, while women did not discriminate between robots and humans as listeners for their self-disclosure in the willingness and the amount of self-disclosure. This also suggests that the gender difference needs to be considered when robots are used as a self-disclosure listener.

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