Robots Racialized in the Likeness of Marginalized Social Identities are Subject to Greater Dehumanization than those racialized as White
The emergence and spread of humanlike robots into increasingly public domains has revealed a concerning phenomenon: people's unabashed dehumanization of robots, particularly those gendered as female. Here we examined this phenomenon further towards understanding whether other socially marginali...
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Zusammenfassung: | The emergence and spread of humanlike robots into increasingly public domains
has revealed a concerning phenomenon: people's unabashed dehumanization of
robots, particularly those gendered as female. Here we examined this phenomenon
further towards understanding whether other socially marginalized cues
(racialization in the likeness of Asian and Black identities), like
female-gendering, are associated with the manifestation of dehumanization
(e.g., objectification, stereotyping) in human-robot interactions. To that end,
we analyzed free-form comments (N=535) on three videos, each depicting a gynoid
- Bina48, Nadine, or Yangyang - racialized as Black, White, and Asian
respectively. As a preliminary control, we additionally analyzed commentary
(N=674) on three videos depicting women embodying similar identity cues. The
analyses indicate that people more frequently dehumanize robots racialized as
Asian and Black, than they do of robots racialized as White. Additional,
preliminary evaluation of how people's responding towards the gynoids compares
to that towards other people suggests that the gynoids' ontology (as robots)
further facilitates the dehumanization. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1808.00320 |