Service robots and artificial morality: an examination of robot behavior that violates human privacy

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Abstract

Purpose: Service robots are expected to become increasingly common, but the ways in which they can move around in an environment with humans, collect and store data about humans and share such data produce a potential for privacy violations. In human-to-human contexts, such violations are transgression of norms to which humans typically react negatively. This study examines if similar reactions occur when the transgressor is a robot. The main dependent variable was the overall evaluation of the robot. Design/methodology/approach: Service robot privacy violations were manipulated in a between-subjects experiment in which a human user interacted with an embodied humanoid robot in an office environment. Findings: The results show that the robot's violations of human privacy attenuated the overall evaluation of the robot and that this effect was sequentially mediated by perceived robot morality and perceived robot humanness. Given that a similar reaction pattern would be expected when humans violate other humans' privacy, the present study offers evidence in support of the notion that humanlike non-humans can elicit responses similar to those elicited by real humans. Practical implications: The results imply that designers of service robots and managers in firms using such robots for providing service to employees should be concerned with restricting the potential for robots' privacy violation activities if the goal is to increase the acceptance of service robots in the habitat of humans. Originality/value: To date, few empirical studies have examined reactions to service robots that violate privacy norms.

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APA

Söderlund, M. (2023). Service robots and artificial morality: an examination of robot behavior that violates human privacy. Journal of Service Theory and Practice, 33(7), 52–72. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSTP-09-2022-0196

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