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What is Uncanny Valley

Handbook of Research on Technoself: Identity in a Technological Society
When robots appear very similar to humans, but not so similar that people consciously mistake them for humans, Mori (1970) theorizes human comfort level toward the robot drops considerably on a continuum of emotional reaction.
Published in Chapter:
Just Doesn’t Look Right: Exploring the Impact of Humanoid Robot Integration into Explosive Ordnance Disposal Teams
Julie Carpenter (University of Washington, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-2211-1.ch032
Abstract
This chapter provides a critical analysis of the potential short- and long-term cultural, emotional, and ethical outcomes facing Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) specialists working closely with anthropomorphic robots in daily team situations as viewed through the interdisciplinary lens of Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) research. Effective small group communication and decision-making is especially critical for EOD teams. Communication failures cause immediate safety concerns, potential physical and psychological harm to EOD team members, and similar repercussions for any individuals in close physical proximity of the Unexploded Ordnance (UXO). The complexity of EOD Team duties, coupled with the inherent limitations of human performance, make it gravely important that technicians have tools that aid rather than hamper team goals. The U.S. Military is seeking a refinement of EOD robot design, including the incorporation of some humanlike characteristics such as biped design, upright walking ability, and responsiveness to human voice and gesture commands. These characteristics can be arguably useful for robots to move in human spaces, learn in a humanlike way, dexterously disarm munitions, and communicate efficiently with human users. But while humanoid design may move the role of the robot to one that becomes potentially more effective in some environments, it may complicate emotional and ethical issues in terms of how human team members view the robot – as an extension of self, an external tool, a team member, a pet, or other entity.
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More Results
The Coming Human/Machine Symbiosis, Effects on Society, and Business Planning
Studies show that the public will accept the presentation of an AI either as a robot or an interface avatar if its appearance is either clearly that of a non-human robot or a very good likeness of a human. Between these two peaks is a valley of almost humans that real humans will not interface with willingly.
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The Role of Robotic Telepresence in the Academic Library
Theory of the way in which robots can cause an unsettling feeling in humans when the robot falls short for passing as human (McDaniel, 2013).
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AI, the New-Age Lawyer: Industry 5.0 and Sustainable Development in Legal Practice
It can be defined as people’s negative reaction to certain lifelike robots up to a certain point. When robots start resembling people; people like them but only to a certain point beyond which they feel an eeriness/creepiness about the robots. Then, when this resemblance increases, people again start liking the robots. The dip in likeness is defined as the uncanny valley.
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