Abstract
A virtual agent is a human-like character that is designed to assist users in interactions with technology and virtual worlds. Research into the preferred visual characteristics of a virtual agent has focused on education-based agents, gaming avatars, and online help assistants. However, findings from these studies are not necessarily generalizable to other technologies, such as self-service checkouts (SSCO). This paper describes data from 578 participants, looking at the gender preferences of Virtual Assistants (VA) in a SSCO context and the impact of VA realism depending on user gender. Due to female participants’ preference for female VAs, and an overall preference for three-dimensional characters, a realistic, female VA should be used in SSCO. The results are discussed in terms of similarity-attraction theory and social role theory.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Rust, R.T., Espinoza, F.: How Technology Advances Influence Business Research and Marketing Strategy. J. Bus. Res. 59, 1072–1078 (2006)
Simon, F., Usunier, J.-C.: Cognitive, Demographic, and Situational Determinants of Service Customer Preferences for Personnel-in-contact over Self-service Technology. International J. Res. in Market. 24, 163–173 (2007)
Meuter, M.L., Bitner, M.J., Ostrom, A.L., Brown, S.W.: Choosing among Alternative Service Delivery Modes: An Investigation of Customer Trial of Self-service Technologies. J. Market. 69, 61–83 (2005)
Lee, H.-J., Fairhurst, A., Cho, H.J.: Gender Differences in Consumer Evaluations of Service Quality: Self-Service Kiosks in Retail. The Serv. Industries J. 33, 248–265 (2013)
Abeele, M.V., Roe, K., Pandelaere, M.: Construct Validation of the Concepts Social Presence, Emotional Presence and Connectedness and an Application of Zajonc’s Social Facilitation Theory to Social Presence Research. In: Proceedings of the 10th Annual International Workshop on Presence, pp. 215–224 (2007)
Qiu, L., Benbasat, I.: A study of Demographic Embodiment of Product Recommendation Agents in Electronic Commerce. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 68, 669–688 (2010)
Shen, K.N., Yu, A.Y., Khalifa, M.: Knowledge Contribution in Virtual Communities: Accounting for Multiple Dimensions of Social Presence through Social Identity. Beh. Inf. Tech. 29, 337–348 (2009)
Reeves, B., Nass, C.: The Media Equation: How People Treat Computers, Television, and New Media Like Real People and Places. CSLI Publications, Cambridge (1996)
Payne, J.A., Johnson, G.I., Szymkowiak, A.: The Behavioural Impact of a Visually Represented Virtual Assistant in a Self-Service Checkout Context. In: Proceedings of the 25th BCS Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, pp. 58–63. British Computer Society (2011)
Heckman, C.E., Wobbrock, J.O.: Put Your Best Face Forward: Anthropomorphic Agents, E-Commerce Consumers, and the Law. In: Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Autonomous Agents, pp. 435–442 (2000)
McBreen, H., Anderson, J., Jack, M.: Evaluating 3D Embodied Conversational Agents in Contrasting VRML Retail Applications. In: Proceedings of International Conference of Autonomous Agents Workshop on Multimodal Communication and Context in Embodied Agents, pp. 83–87 (2001)
McBreen, H.M., Jack, M.A.: Evaluating Humanoid Synthetic Agents in E-Retail Applications. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics 31, 394–405 (2001)
Brave, S., Nass, C., Hutchinson, K.: Computers That Care: Investigating the Effects of Orientation of Emotion Exhibited by an Embodied Computer Agent. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 62, 161–178 (2005)
Groom, V., Nass, C., Chen, T., Nielsen, A., Scarborough, J.K., Robles, E.: Evaluating the Effects of Behavioral Realism in Embodied Agents. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 67, 842–849 (2009)
Verhagen, T., van Nes, J., Feldberg, F., van Dolen, W.: Virtual customer service agents: Using social presence and personalization to shape online service encounters. Res. Memorand. 10 (2011)
MacDorman, K.F., Green, R.D., Ho, C.-C., Koch, C.T.: Too Real for Comfort? Uncanny Responses to Computer Generated Faces. Comp. Hum. Beh. 25, 695–710 (2009)
Cowell, A.J., Stanney, K.M.: Manipulation of Non-verbal Interaction Style and Demographic Embodiment to Increase Anthropomorphic Computer Character Credibility. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 6, 281–306 (2005)
Haake, M., Gulz, A.: A Look at the Roles of Looks & Roles in Embodied Pedagogical Agents – A User Preference Perspective. Int. J. Art. Int. Ed. 19, 39–71 (2009)
Sahimi, A.M., Zain, F.M., Kamar, N.A.N., Samar, N., Rahman, Z.A., Majid, O., Atan, H., Fook, F.S.: The Pedagogical Agent in Online Learning: Effects of the Degree of Realism on Achievement in Terms of Gender. Contemp. Educ. Technol. 1, 175–185 (2010)
Veletsianos, G.: Contextually Relevant Pedagogical Agents: Visual Appearance, Stereotypes, and First Impressions and Their Impact on Learning. Comp. & Educ. 55, 576–585 (2010)
Baylor, A.L.: The Design of Motivational Agents and Avatars. Educ. Tech. Res. & Develop. 59, 291–300 (2011)
Kim, Y., Wei, Q.: The Impact of Learner Attributes and Learner Choice in an Agent-based Environment. Comp. Educ. 56, 505–514 (2011)
Lee, E.-J.: The Effects of “Gender” of the Computer on Informational Social Influence: The Moderating Role of Task Type. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 58, 347–362 (2003)
Berry, D.C., Butler, L.T., de Rosis, F.: Evaluating a Realistic Agent in an Advice-giving Task. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 63, 304–327 (2005)
Gong, L.: Is Happy Better than Sad even if They Are Both Non-Adaptive? Effects of Emotional Expressions of Talking-Head Interface Agents. Int. J. Hum.-Comp. Stud. 65, 183–191 (2007)
Pratt, J.A., Hauser, K., Ugray, Z., Patterson, O.: Looking at Human-computer Interface Design: Effects of Ethnicity in Computer Agents. Inter. Comp. 19, 512–523 (2007)
Van Vugt, H.V., Konijn, E.A., Hoorn, J.F., Keur, I., Elïens, A.: Realism is Not All! User Engagement with Task-Related Interface Characters. Inter. Comp. 19, 267–280 (2007)
Baylor, A.L., Plant, E.A.: Pedagogical Agents as Social Models for Engineering: The Influence of Agent Appearance on Female Choice. Art. Intell. Ed. 125, 65–72 (2005)
Baylor, A.L.: Promoting Motivation with Virtual Agents and Avatars: Role of Visual Presence and Appearance. Phil. Trans. of the Royal Soc. B: Biol. Sciences 364, 3559–3565 (2009)
Rosenberg-Kima, R.B., Baylor, A.L., Plant, E.A., Doerr, C.E.: Interface Agents as Social Models for Female Students: The Effects of Agent Visual Presence and Appearance on Female Students’ Attitudes and Beliefs. Comp. Hum. Beh. 24, 2741–2756 (2008)
Bailenson, J.N., Yee, N.: Digital Chameleons: Automatic Assimilation of Nonverbal Gestures in Immersive Virtual Environments. Psych. Sc. 16, 814–819 (2005)
Ducheneaut, N., Wen, M.-H., Yee, N., Wadley, G.: Body and Mind: A Study of Avatar Personalization in Three Virtual Worlds. In: Proceedings of CHI (2009)
Li, I., Forlizzi, J., Dey, A., Kiesler, S.: When the Interface is the User’s Face: Ideas for Research And Applications. In: CHI Workshop in HCI and the Face (2006)
Cross, S.E., Madson, L.: Models of the Self: Self-construals and Gender. Psych. Bull. 122, 5–37 (1997)
Eagly, A.H., Wood, W., Diekman, A.B.: Social Role Theory of Sex Difference and Similarities: A Current Appraisal. In: Eckes, T., Trautner, H.M. (eds.) Developmental Social Psychology of Gender. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., New Jersey (2000)
Cuddy, A.J.C., Fiske, S.T., Glick, P.: The BIAS map: Behaviors from Intergroup Affect and Stereotypes. J. Pers. Soc. Psych. 92, 631–648 (2007)
Rudman, L.A., Goodwin, S.A.: Gender Differences in Automatic In-Group Bias: Why Do Women Like Women More than Men Like Men? J. Pers. Soc. Psych. 87, 494–509 (2004)
Vigil, J.M.: A socio-relational Framework of Sex Differences in the Expression of Emotion. Beh. Brain Sc. 32, 375–390 (2009)
Baylor, A.L., Kim, Y.: Pedagogical Agent Design: The Impact of Agent Realism, Gender, Ethnicity, and Instructional Role. In: Lester, J.C., Vicari, R.M., Paraguaçu, F. (eds.) ITS 2004. LNCS, vol. 3220, pp. 592–603. Springer, Heidelberg (2004)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Payne, J., Szymkowiak, A., Robertson, P., Johnson, G. (2013). Gendering the Machine: Preferred Virtual Assistant Gender and Realism in Self-Service. In: Aylett, R., Krenn, B., Pelachaud, C., Shimodaira, H. (eds) Intelligent Virtual Agents. IVA 2013. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 8108. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40415-3_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40415-3_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-40414-6
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-40415-3
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)