TY - JOUR
T1 - Moral psychology of sex robots
T2 - An experimental study − how pathogen disgust is associated with interhuman sex but not interandroid sex
AU - Koverola, Mika
AU - Drosinou, Maria-Anna
AU - Palomäki, Jussi Petteri
AU - Halonen, Juho
AU - Kunnari, Anton Johannes Olavi
AU - Repo, Marko
AU - Lehtonen, Noora
AU - Laakasuo, Michael
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The idea of sex with robots seems to fascinate the general public, raising both enthusiasm and revulsion. We ran two experimental studies (Ns = 172 and 260) where we compared people’s reactions to variants of stories about a person visiting a bordello. Our results show that paying for the services of a sex robot is condemned less harshly than paying for the services of a human sex worker, especially if the payer is married. We have for the first time experimentally confirmed that people are somewhat unsure about whether using a sex robot while in a committed monogamous relationship should be considered as infidelity. We also shed light on the psychological factors influencing attitudes toward sex robots, including disgust sensitivity and interest in science fiction. Our results indicate that sex with a robot is indeed genuinely considered as sex, and a sex robot is genuinely seen as a robot; thus, we show that standard research methods on sexuality and robotics are also applicable in research on sex robotics.
AB - The idea of sex with robots seems to fascinate the general public, raising both enthusiasm and revulsion. We ran two experimental studies (Ns = 172 and 260) where we compared people’s reactions to variants of stories about a person visiting a bordello. Our results show that paying for the services of a sex robot is condemned less harshly than paying for the services of a human sex worker, especially if the payer is married. We have for the first time experimentally confirmed that people are somewhat unsure about whether using a sex robot while in a committed monogamous relationship should be considered as infidelity. We also shed light on the psychological factors influencing attitudes toward sex robots, including disgust sensitivity and interest in science fiction. Our results indicate that sex with a robot is indeed genuinely considered as sex, and a sex robot is genuinely seen as a robot; thus, we show that standard research methods on sexuality and robotics are also applicable in research on sex robotics.
KW - 113 Computer and information sciences
KW - 515 Psychology
U2 - 10.1515/pjbr-2020-0012
DO - 10.1515/pjbr-2020-0012
M3 - Article
VL - 11
SP - 233
EP - 249
JO - Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics
JF - Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics
SN - 2081-4836
IS - 1
ER -