Innocence over utilitarianism - Heightened Moral Standards for Robots in Rescue Dilemmas

Jukka Sundvall, Maria-Anna Drosinou, Ivar Hannikainen, Kaisa Maria Elovaara, Juho Halonen, Volo Herzon, Robin Kopecký, Michaela Jirout Košová, Mika Koverola, Anton Johannes Olavi Kunnari, Silva Perander, Teemu Juhani Saikkonen, Jussi Petteri Palomäki, Michael Laakasuo

Forskningsoutput: TidskriftsbidragArtikelVetenskapligPeer review

Sammanfattning

Research in moral psychology has found that robots, more than humans, are expected to make utilitarian decisions. This expectation is found specifically when contrasting utilitarian action to deontological inaction. In a series of eight experiments (total N = 3752), we compared judgments about robots' and humans' decisions in a rescue dilemma with no possibility of deontological inaction. A robot's decision to rescue an innocent victim of an accident was judged more positively than the decision to rescue two people culpable for the accident (Studies 1-2b). This pattern repeated in a large-scale web survey (Study 3, N = similar to 19,000) and reversed when all victims were equally culpable/innocent (Study 5). Differences in judgments about humans' and robots' decisions were largest for norm-violating decisions. In sum, robots are not always expected to make utilitarian decisions, and their decisions are judged differently from those of humans based on other moral standards as well.
Originalspråkengelska
TidskriftEuropean Journal of Social Psychology
Antal sidor26
ISSN0046-2772
DOI
Status!!Accepted/In press - 12 jan. 2023
MoE-publikationstypA1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad

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