Publication

How do people intend to disclose personal information to a social robot in public spaces?

Conference Article

Conference

IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN)

Edition

33rd

Pages

1809-1814

Doc link

https://doi.org/10.1109/RO-MAN60168.2024.10731370

File

Download the digital copy of the doc pdf document

Abstract

Social robots interacting with people in public spaces may access and collect their personal information, which raises privacy concerns regarding the disclosure of personal information. This paper aims to investigate factors impacting individuals’ intention to disclose personal information to a social robot in public spaces and evaluate the actual disclosure during the interaction with the robot. For this purpose, a model is proposed to predict people’s intentions to disclose information to a social robot. We conducted our experiment at a public festival with more than 100 participants using the social robot ARI. The findings reveal the substantial impact of factors including risk beliefs, trusting beliefs, perceived enjoyment, and social influence on the intention to disclose personal information. Moreover, they reveal that although only a small percentage (6.20%) of people had the intention to disclose information to the social robot, most participants (98.00%) finally disclosed their personal information.

Categories

cybernetics.

Author keywords

Social robot, intention to disclose personal information, actual disclosure, interaction

Scientific reference

A. Aryania, R. Huertas, S. Forgas, C. Angulo and G. Alenyà. How do people intend to disclose personal information to a social robot in public spaces?, 33rd IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication, 2024, Pasadena, California, USA, pp. 1809-1814, IEEE.