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WHY WE LOVE SOME ROBOTS AND HATE OTHERS

BBC Science Focus

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Summer 2022

Not all artificial intelligence is equal: just ask Clippy, Microsoft's much reviled virtual assistant

- DR KATE DARLING

WHY WE LOVE SOME ROBOTS AND HATE OTHERS

Back in 2019, MIT graduate student Daniella DiPaola and I began to frequent our local grocery store, and not to shop for food. The store had introduced a robot that we wanted to see in action. The 1.9m-tall machine roamed the aisles, scanning the floor for spills and paging the employees to clean up hazards. But what interested us most was that, despite its large googly eyes and friendly name, Marty the robot was unpopular with customers.

As robots come into shared spaces, people tend to have strong positive or negative reactions, often taking engineers by surprise. But the key to designing automated systems may be simple: recognising that people treat robots as if they're alive.

Even though robots have been building cars in factories for a while, we've seen a more recent wave of deployments in areas where they interact with people. Whether they're doing the hoovering or delivering food, robots are increasingly entering our workplaces, homes and public spaces.

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Conjure in your mind a giant, deep-sea predator, and I bet there's a colossal squid lurking in there, perhaps with an even bigger sperm whale chasing after it.

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EDITOR'S PICKS...

This month's smartest tech

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'Clearest sign' of alien life on Mars found by NASA

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Subtle light shines through our skulls in patterns that depends on what we're doing

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"Far from being the bad guy, cortisol is a hormone that's vital for our bodies and brains"

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HOW MANY ORGANS COULD I SURVIVE WITHOUT?

The annals of medical history prove that the average human meat sack is surprisingly resilient.

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