Skip to main content

Write a PREreview

The Bystander Effect in Human-Robot Interaction: How the Presence of Bystanders Inhibits Help for a Social Robot

Posted
Server
PsychArchives
DOI
10.23668/psycharchives.21242

As humans and social robots increasingly coexist, a crucial question remains: Do established social heuristics (such as the bystander effect) govern human behavior toward robots? Through two pre-registered experiments (N = 401 and N = 616), we demonstrate that the presence of bystanders consistently inhibits helping behavior toward robots in human-robot interaction (HRI), mirroring classic findings in human-human interaction. In Experiment 1, we found that when bystanders were present, individuals were less likely to help a social robot in need than if they were alone. In Experiment 2, we used video stimuli with higher ecological validity and incorporated a human victim as a control group, generalizing this effect and revealing its robust stability. While the presence of bystanders generally inhibited helping intentions (regardless of whether the victim was human or robot), the strength of the bystander effect did not differ between human and robot victims. These findings provide the first empirical evidence that the bystander effect can be replicated in human-robot interaction (HRI). Our work contributes to the extension of the application boundaries of the bystander effect and the construction of a harmonious human-robot symbiotic society.

You can write a PREreview of The Bystander Effect in Human-Robot Interaction: How the Presence of Bystanders Inhibits Help for a Social Robot. A PREreview is a review of a preprint and can vary from a few sentences to a lengthy report, similar to a journal-organized peer-review report.

Before you start

We will ask you to log in with your ORCID iD. If you don’t have an iD, you can create one.

What is an ORCID iD?

An ORCID iD is a unique identifier that distinguishes you from everyone with the same or similar name.

Start now