Karl F. MacDorman presents on the uncanny valley at the 2007 NMC Summer Conference (June 6-9, 2007, Indianapolis), hosted by the Indiana University School of Informatics. The talk introduces the un...
Karl F. MacDorman presents on the uncanny valley at the 2007 NMC Summer Conference (June 6-9, 2007, Indianapolis), hosted by the Indiana University School of Informatics. The talk introduces the uncanny valley in animation and robotics and morphing experiments.
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The fact that there's an uncanny valley for human perception of androids is 100 percent legit. It's obvious to me. Till some point of similarity between a robot and a human, people see a less perfect humanoid as a robot, over which human perception of "the thing" makes a 180 degree turn, from ROBOT to HUMAN.
Because people feel more familiarity with a robot that looks like a human than a human that looks like a robot, the familiarity curve begin to decline once the similarity level reached a certain point.
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