Suche nach Personen

plus im Publikationsserver
plus bei BASE
plus bei Google Scholar

Daten exportieren

 

Societal Attitudes Toward Service Robots : Adore, Abhor, Ignore, or Unsure?

Titelangaben

Verfügbarkeit überprüfen

Yoganathan, Vignesh ; Osburg, Victoria-Sophie ; Fronzetti Colladon, Andrea ; Charles, Vincent ; Toporowski, Waldemar:
Societal Attitudes Toward Service Robots : Adore, Abhor, Ignore, or Unsure?
In: Journal of service research : JSR. 28 (2025) 1. - S. 93-111.
ISSN 1094-6705 ; 1552-7379

Volltext

Volltext Link zum Volltext (externe URL):
https://doi.org/10.1177/10946705241295841

Kurzfassung/Abstract

Societal or population-level attitudes are aggregated patterns of different individual attitudes, representing collective general predispositions. As service robots become ubiquitous, understanding attitudes towards them at the population (vs. individual) level enables firms to expand robot services to a broad (vs. niche) market. Targeting population-level attitudes would benefit service firms because: (1) they are more persistent, thus, stronger predictors of behavioral patterns and (2) this approach is less reliant on personal data, whereas individualized services are vulnerable to AI-related privacy risks. As for service theory, ignoring broad unobserved differences in attitudes produces biased conclusions, and our systematic review of previous research highlights a poor understanding of potential heterogeneity in attitudes toward service robots. We present five diverse studies (S1–S5), utilizing multinational and “real world” data (N total = 89,541; years: 2012–2024). Results reveal a stable structure comprising four distinct attitude profiles (S1–S5): positive (“adore”), negative (“abhor”), indifferent (“ignore”), and ambivalent (“unsure”). The psychological need for interacting with service staff, and for autonomy and relatedness in technology use, function as attitude profile antecedents (S2). Importantly, the attitude profiles predict differences in post-interaction discomfort and anxiety (S3), satisfaction ratings and service evaluations (S4), and perceived sociability and uncanniness based on a robot’s humanlikeness (S5).

Weitere Angaben

Publikationsform:Artikel
Sprache des Eintrags:Englisch
Institutionen der Universität:Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät > Betriebswirtschaftslehre > ABWL und Marktpsychologie
DOI / URN / ID:10.1177/10946705241295841
Open Access: Freie Zugänglichkeit des Volltexts?:Nein
Peer-Review-Journal:Ja
Verlag:SAGE Publications
Die Zeitschrift ist nachgewiesen in:
Titel an der KU entstanden:Nein
KU.edoc-ID:35168
Eingestellt am: 14. Mai 2025 10:15
Letzte Änderung: 14. Mai 2025 10:15
URL zu dieser Anzeige: https://edoc.ku.de/id/eprint/35168/
AnalyticsGoogle Scholar