The influence of conversational agent embodiment and conversational relevance on socially desirable responding

作者:

Highlights:

• People disclose less about their sensitive behavior to a human than to a CA.

• When the CA appears to understand, people disclose less than when it does not.

• No difference between interviewers for the disclosure of nonsensitive information

摘要

Conversational agents (CAs) are becoming an increasingly common component in a wide range of information systems. A great deal of research to date has focused on enhancing traits that make CAs more humanlike. However, few studies have examined the influence such traits have on information disclosure. This research builds on self-disclosure, social desirability, and social presence theories to explain how CA anthropomorphism affects disclosure of personally sensitive information. Taken together, these theories suggest that as CAs become more humanlike, the social desirability of user responses will increase. In this study, we use a laboratory experiment to examine the influence of two elements of CA design—conversational relevance and embodiment—on the answers people give in response to sensitive and non-sensitive questions. We compare the responses given to various CAs to those given in a face-to-face interview and an online survey. The results show that for sensitive questions, CAs with better conversational abilities elicit more socially desirable responses from participants, with a less significant effect found for embodiment. These results suggest that for applications where eliciting honest answers to sensitive questions is important, CAs that are “better” in terms of humanlike realism may not be better for eliciting truthful responses to sensitive questions.

论文关键词:Social presence,Conversational agents,Disclosure,Social desirability

论文评审过程:Received 22 May 2018, Revised 20 July 2018, Accepted 28 August 2018, Available online 29 August 2018, Version of Record 5 September 2018.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dss.2018.08.011