The Effect of Interdependence and Co-presence on Compliance with a Rule-breaking Robot
Summary
As robots and virtual agents become integral workplace teammates, reliance on them increases.
This increases the potential for conflicts between robot-issued guidance and established
workplace rules. Therefore, it is vital to investigate which factors make individuals more likely
to comply with rule-violating requests from autonomous agents in workspace settings. This
thesis experiment investigated the effects of interdependence and co-presence on human
compliance with rule-breaking requests from a virtual robot in a VR warehouse environment.The
experiment involved two interdependence conditions: collaboration (high interdependence and
co-presence) and coexistence (low interdependence and co-presence). Participants were involved
in a box sorting task based on color. In the collaboration condition the robot would work with the
participant by bringing them the boxes, while in the coexistence condition the robot would be
doing unrelated work next to the participant. At certain points, boxes with ambiguous colors
would show up, prompting the robot to request an action from the participant which violated the
established rules set by the experiment. Results indicated no significant differences in
compliance rates or hesitation times between conditions. The qualitative data pointed to task
logic overshadowing the social influence of interdependence. Methodological limitations, such
as short task duration, ambiguous instructions, and potential ceiling effects, were identified as
possible overshadowing factors. We critically evaluated our design choices, and came with
suggestions for future research involving extended tasks, emotionally charged scenarios, and
explicit measures of perceived interdependence. This study contributes valuable insights into
how contextual factors can dominate interdependence in human-robot interactions. This study
establishes a theoretical foundation and provides practical guidelines for improved experimental
design. We also published licence free material to use in future robotic VR experiments.