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中西方文化差异对虚拟人道德责任判断的影响

he Influence of Cultural Differences between China and the West on Moral Responsibility Judgment of Virtual Humans

中文摘要英文摘要

p>近年来,社交网络上涌现出大量具有真人特征的虚拟人物,他们以第一人称视角叙事以获得影响力,然而其背后的道德伦理问题也逐渐浮现。当社交媒体虚拟人犯错时,不同文化背景的人们对其道德判断会有何不同?本文基于心智感知理论,通过五个主要实验探索中西方文化差异对虚拟人道德责任判断的影响和机制。研究表明,在被告知虚拟人的不道德行为后,比起西方文化,中国文化影响下的人们认为虚拟人需要承担更大的道德责任;但这种文化差异没有出现在对真人的道德责任判断上(实验1a~1c)。并且不论虚拟人是由真实人类还是人工智能驱动,这种文化差异都会存在(实验1c)。这种文化差异通过感知心智能力来中介(实验2)。具体而言,比起西方文化,中国文化影响下的人们认为虚拟人的心智能力(特别是感知力)更高,因此需要承担更大的道德责任。此外,对虚拟人更大的道德责任判断会导致中国文化(相比西方文化)影响下的人们更倾向于对虚拟人施加道德惩罚(实验3)。本文通过实证研究将道德责任判断和心智感知的对象拓展到虚拟人上,并揭示了中西方文化差异及其后续影响。</p

p>Virtual humans are digital characters created in computer graphics software that take a first-person view of the world and have a social media presence. Compared with real humans, however, are people likely to attribute moral responsibility differently to virtual humans whenthey do something morally wrong? This important empirical question remains unanswered. Therefore, we addressed this query using Mental Perception Theory. We did so through exploringthe influence and mechanism of cultural differences between China and the West on individuals&rsquo; perceptions of moral responsibility judgment of virtual humans versus real humans. Findings revealed that, when virtual humans engaged in immoral behaviors&mdash;irrespective of whether real humans or artificial intelligence (AI) controlled them&mdash;people in China (vs. the West) attributedmore moral responsibility to virtual humans but equal moral responsibility to real humans. Perceived mental capacities, especially perceived experience, mediated the interaction effect of culture. Furthermore, compared to Westerners, Chinese people were more likely to punish virtual (vs. real) humans, such as by no longer following their social accounts. Five experiments revealed the foregoing findings. Study 1a and 1b used a 2 (human blogger vs. virtual blogger) &times; 2 (Chinese culture vs. Western culture) between-subjects design. Twohundred Chinese and 200 U.S. Caucasian participants were recruited in Study 1a. They first readthe profile of a virtual/human blogger, Rico, on Weibo (i.e., Chinese)/Twitter (i.e., U.S.). Next, they were told that Rico had exposed the private behavior of a netizen, which made that individual suffer from cyber violence. After that, participants rated the moral responsibility of Rico with twoitems. Consistent with our prediction, there was a significant interaction effect between the Chinese/Western culture and the virtual/human blogger on moral responsibility judgment. Specifically, Chinese (vs. Western) people attributed more moral responsibility to the virtual blogger, but there was no significant difference in moral responsibility judgment toward the human blogger. In Study 1b, we recruited 200 Chinese and 199 British Caucasian participants online. We utilized a similar study design and manipulations to those employed in Study 1a. Study1b replicated the results of Study 1 with a new scenario (i.e., tax evasion) and newmethods of measuring moral responsibility judgment. Study 1c used a 3 (human blogger vs. virtual blogger powered by AI vs. virtual blogger powered by real humans) &times; 2 (Chinese culture vs. Western culture) between-subjects design. Three hundred Chinese and 300 British Caucasian participants were recruited online. The results showed that Chinese (vs. British) people attributed greater human-like moral responsibility toa virtual human controlled by real humans as well as by artificial intelligence. Study 2 used the same study design as employed in 1b. Two hundred Chinese and 199American Caucasian participants were recruited online. They read the same profile of the virtual/human blogger Rico and his immoral behavior (i.e., tax evasion). Then, participants rated&nbsp;moral responsibility judgment and mental capacities of Rico. Results revealed the mediating role of perceived mental capacities (i.e., experience, not agency) on the cultural difference of perceivedmoral responsibility judgment and ruled out two possible alternative explanations. Study 3 used a 2 (Chinese culture vs. Western culture) between-subjects design. One hundredChinese participants and 101 American Caucasian participants were recruited online. This studyutilized another scenario (i.e., plagiarism) and replicated the results of the four previous studies. Furthermore, we showed the downstream effect that Chinese (vs. U.S.) people believed that the virtual human should be punished more (i.e., fining, suspending the account, and no longer following the account). In summary, based on Mental Perception Theory, this paper provided evidence for the cultural differences between Chinese people and Westerners on moral responsibility judgment of virtual humans. Perceived mental capacities (i.e., experience, not agency) mediated this interactioneffect. In addition, we revealed the downstream results of moral punishment and contributed toliterature on cultural differences and the theory about moral judgment on non-human entities.</p

10.12074/202302.00072V1

文化理论信息传播、知识传播科学、科学研究

虚拟人道德责任文化差异心智能力

.中西方文化差异对虚拟人道德责任判断的影响[EB/OL].(2023-02-12)[2025-08-16].https://chinaxiv.org/abs/202302.00072.点此复制

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