Shall I Trust You? From Child-Robot Interaction to Trusting Relationships

scientific article published on 03 April 2020

Shall I Trust You? From Child-Robot Interaction to Trusting Relationships is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3389/FPSYG.2020.00469
P932PMC publication ID7147504
P698PubMed publication ID32317998

P2093author name stringAngelo Cangelosi
Paul L Harris
Antonella Marchetti
Cinzia Di Dio
Davide Massaro
Federico Manzi
Giulia Peretti
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Conflict Inhibitory Control Facilitates Pretense Quality in Young PreschoolersQ35711756
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Preschoolers mistrust ignorant and inaccurate speakersQ95819079
WHEN IS TRUTH RELEVANT?Q38817128
Hypermentalizing, attachment, and epistemic trust in adolescent BPD: Clinical illustrationsQ38929363
Children assess informant reliability using bystanders' non-verbal cuesQ40045608
TrustQ40258436
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Knowing better: the role of prior knowledge and culture in trust in testimony.Q47796728
Trust and Deception in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Social Learning PerspectiveQ47851116
Infants understand the referential nature of human gaze but not robot gaze.Q48724114
The Dimensional Change Card Sort (DCCS): a method of assessing executive function in childrenQ50313919
Young children's trust in their mother's claims: longitudinal links with attachment security in infancy.Q50743372
Choosing your informant: weighing familiarity and recent accuracy.Q51936656
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P304page(s)469
P577publication date2020-04-03
P1433published inFrontiers in PsychologyQ2794477
P1476titleShall I Trust You? From Child-Robot Interaction to Trusting Relationships
P478volume11

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cites work (P2860)
Q100512337How attitudes generated by humanoid robots shape human brain activity
Q97067359Objects as Communicative Mediators in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder
Q97587524The understanding of congruent and incongruent referential gaze in 17-month-old infants: an eye-tracking study comparing human and robot

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