Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability

In this study, we discuss the psychological acceptability of an utterance strategy used by the Driving Support Agent (DSA). Previous literature regarding DSA suggests that the adoption of a small robot as a form will increase acceptability. However, the agent’s utterance has been reported as a probl...

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Main Authors: Tomoki Miyamoto, Daisuke Katagami, Yuka Shigemitsu, Mayumi Usami, Takahiro Tanaka, Hitoshi Kanamori, Yuki Yoshihara, Kazuhiro Fujikake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.526942/full
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spelling doaj-ec45d1e6f2bf453d95cb98af484809402021-02-24T06:20:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-02-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.526942526942Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological AcceptabilityTomoki Miyamoto0Daisuke Katagami1Daisuke Katagami2Yuka Shigemitsu3Mayumi Usami4Takahiro Tanaka5Hitoshi Kanamori6Yuki Yoshihara7Kazuhiro Fujikake8Graduate School of Tokyo Polytechnic University, Kanagawa, JapanGraduate School of Tokyo Polytechnic University, Kanagawa, JapanFaculty of Engineering, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Kanagawa, JapanFaculty of Engineering, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Kanagawa, JapanNational Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Tokyo, JapanInstitutes of Innovation for Future Society, Nagoya University, Aichi, JapanInstitutes of Innovation for Future Society, Nagoya University, Aichi, JapanInstitutes of Innovation for Future Society, Nagoya University, Aichi, JapanSchool of Psychology, Chukyo University, Aichi, JapanIn this study, we discuss the psychological acceptability of an utterance strategy used by the Driving Support Agent (DSA). Previous literature regarding DSA suggests that the adoption of a small robot as a form will increase acceptability. However, the agent’s utterance has been reported as a problem faced by the user. Therefore, in this study, we designed the agent’s utterance using politeness strategy as described by Brown and Levinson’s famous sociolinguistics and pragmatics theory and analyzed its acceptability through a participant-based experiment. In this experiment, we used positive and negative politeness strategies (PPS and NPS, respectively). In general, PPS is utilized to reflect the desire to be liked/recognized by others, whereas NPS is utilized to reflect the need for not wanting to be disturbed by others. Based on our results, PPS was rated high compared to NPS (n = 197). Therefore, many participants highly evaluated PPS. However, there was a group of participants who appreciated NPS. There were also participants who evaluated the two strategies equally. The number of participants in these three groups was observed at 4:1:1. This result contributes as an index on the utterance design of the DSA.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.526942/fullhuman-agent interactionhuman-robot interactiondriving support agentpoliteness theorysocial distanceutterance design
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tomoki Miyamoto
Daisuke Katagami
Daisuke Katagami
Yuka Shigemitsu
Mayumi Usami
Takahiro Tanaka
Hitoshi Kanamori
Yuki Yoshihara
Kazuhiro Fujikake
spellingShingle Tomoki Miyamoto
Daisuke Katagami
Daisuke Katagami
Yuka Shigemitsu
Mayumi Usami
Takahiro Tanaka
Hitoshi Kanamori
Yuki Yoshihara
Kazuhiro Fujikake
Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
Frontiers in Psychology
human-agent interaction
human-robot interaction
driving support agent
politeness theory
social distance
utterance design
author_facet Tomoki Miyamoto
Daisuke Katagami
Daisuke Katagami
Yuka Shigemitsu
Mayumi Usami
Takahiro Tanaka
Hitoshi Kanamori
Yuki Yoshihara
Kazuhiro Fujikake
author_sort Tomoki Miyamoto
title Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
title_short Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
title_full Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
title_fullStr Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Social Distance Expressed by Driving Support Agent’s Utterance on Psychological Acceptability
title_sort influence of social distance expressed by driving support agent’s utterance on psychological acceptability
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-02-01
description In this study, we discuss the psychological acceptability of an utterance strategy used by the Driving Support Agent (DSA). Previous literature regarding DSA suggests that the adoption of a small robot as a form will increase acceptability. However, the agent’s utterance has been reported as a problem faced by the user. Therefore, in this study, we designed the agent’s utterance using politeness strategy as described by Brown and Levinson’s famous sociolinguistics and pragmatics theory and analyzed its acceptability through a participant-based experiment. In this experiment, we used positive and negative politeness strategies (PPS and NPS, respectively). In general, PPS is utilized to reflect the desire to be liked/recognized by others, whereas NPS is utilized to reflect the need for not wanting to be disturbed by others. Based on our results, PPS was rated high compared to NPS (n = 197). Therefore, many participants highly evaluated PPS. However, there was a group of participants who appreciated NPS. There were also participants who evaluated the two strategies equally. The number of participants in these three groups was observed at 4:1:1. This result contributes as an index on the utterance design of the DSA.
topic human-agent interaction
human-robot interaction
driving support agent
politeness theory
social distance
utterance design
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.526942/full
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