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  4. Humanoid robots versus humans: how is emotional valence of facial expressions recognized by individuals with schizophrenia? An exploratory study
 
research article

Humanoid robots versus humans: how is emotional valence of facial expressions recognized by individuals with schizophrenia? An exploratory study

Raffard, Stéphane
•
Bortolon, Catherine
•
Khoramshahi, Mahdi  
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2016
Schizophrenia Research

Background: The use of humanoid robots to play a therapeutic role in helping individuals with social disorders such as autism is a newly emerging field, but remains unexplored in schizophrenia. As the ability for robots to convey emotion appear of fundamental importance for human-robot interactions, we aimed to evaluate how schizophrenia patients recognize positive and negative facial emotions displayed by a humanoid robot. Methods: We included 21 schizophrenia outpatients and 17 healthy participants. In a reaction time task, they were shown photographs of human faces and of a humanoid robot (iCub) expressing either positive or negative emotions, as well as a non-social stimulus. Patients' symptomatology, mind perception, reaction time and number of correct answers were evaluated. Results: Results indicated that patients and controls recognized better and faster the emotional valence of facial expressions expressed by humans than by the robot. Participants were faster when responding to positive compared to negative human faces and inversely were faster for negative compared to positive robot faces. Importantly, participants performed worse when they perceived iCub as being capable of experiencing things (experience subscale of the mind perception questionnaire). In schizophrenia patients, negative correlations emerged between negative symptoms and both robot's and human's negative face accuracy. Conclusions: Individuals do not respond similarly to human facial emotion and to non-anthropomorphic emotional signals. Humanoid robots have the potential to convey emotions to patients with schizophrenia, but their appearance seems of major importance for human-robot interactions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.schres.2016.06.001
Web of Science ID

WOS:000384130200066

Author(s)
Raffard, Stéphane
Bortolon, Catherine
Khoramshahi, Mahdi  
Salesse, Robin
Burca, Marianna
Marin, Ludovic
Bardy, Benoit
Billard, Aude  orcid-logo
Macioce, Valérie
Capdevielle, Delphine
Date Issued

2016

Published in
Schizophrenia Research
Volume

76

Issue

2-3

Start page

506

End page

513

Subjects

iCub

•

Humanoid robot

•

Facial emotion

•

Schizophrenia

•

Mind perception

•

COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE

•

COGNITIVE MODELING

URL

URL

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303719647
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LASA  
Available on Infoscience
June 8, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/126560
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