256bits
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I have heard of that theory as being applied to robots.jedishrfu said:Housing it in a humanlike robotic body where it can function and learn like us will not make it human. There is a known fear that people get the more human a robot behaves called the uncanny valley which may prevent human like robots from becoming commercially viable.
As stated in the wiki " hypothesized psychological and aesthetic relation between an object's degree of resemblance to a human being and the emotional response to the object."
The Wiki states criticism, of the proposed theory, should be to be taken into account as to the certainty of its application to robots ( only ).
A robot with a dog's head on a human looking body would fall into the uncanny valley even though it has a fairly noticeable severe unhuman like quality, contradicting the theory in that the more human like but not quite has a deep uncanny valley effect.
The uncanny valley effect occurs with human on human interactions with the viewer making conclusions based upon what they, probably from a mix of influences from cultural background, life experience and innate projections, on what a healthy, intelligent, non-threatening but desirable human should look like.
The robot can have the features promoted by Disney, such as a somewhat larger head to body ratio, with saucer large watery eyes to gain acceptance. Although these are defects from the normal looking human, the cuteness factor overcomes the uncanny valley effect of not being quite living-human looking.
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