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Do Robots Influence Our Decisions When They Disagree With Us?

What is it about?

We tested whether people are influenced by robots during a simple decision‑making task. Participants labeled images while two Furhat robots gave their own answers. One robot spoke in a way that suggested it understood human values (“value‑aware”); the other only described the images visually. We measured: - whether people changed their answers because of the robots’ opinions, - how long they took to make their final choice, and - where they looked during the task (their gaze). We also asked participants to tell us after the experiment whether they noticed a difference between the two robots.

Why is it important?

Robots are becoming social partners in education, care, and daily life. Understanding how they influence people helps us design safer, more transparent interactions. Our results show that: - People notice when a robot appears more value‑aware. - People sometimes conform when both robots disagree (about 25% of the time). - They take longer to give their final answer when both robots disagree (trend, not statistically significant). This highlights both a risk (robots could pressure or mislead users) and a potential benefit (robots could encourage reflection in situations like scam detection).

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The following have contributed to this page:
Giulio Abbo and Giulia Pusceddu
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