학술논문

How do People Perceive Collaborative Conversational Agents?
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. 45(45)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence
Linguistics
Natural Language Processing
Perception
Comparative Studies
Language
Abstract
As society embraces technology to support collaboration anywhere and at anytime, there is a growing opportunity for artificial agents to support such collaboration. However, little seems known about how such agents impact the behavioural performance of human teams. To answer this, we devised a Wizard of Oz study where teams of 3 participants located and corralled targets into a containment area in a virtual desert environment. The Wizard played the role of an artificial intelligent operator who had a map view showing the location of participants, targets and the containment area, and could verbally communicate this information. The Wizard operated under two conditions: they could solely use the map view to decide what responses to utter (non-responsive interaction) or could also listen to participant queries (responsive interaction). The results revealed that participant performance was unaffected by responsive interaction condition, despite having a significantly more favourable perception of a responsive agent.