What Mourning the "Death" of a Robot Looks Like on Social Media People Use Similar Language to Describe Feelings for Animate and Inanimate Objects

Virginia Alvino YoungThursday, July 16, 2020

CMU researchers have found that people have a hard time differentiating between tweets about humans and tweets about robots, especially NASA's Opportunity rover (shown here), which ceased communications in 2018.

"RIP Oppy" sounds like a condolence for a human, or at least a pet. But it's actually a phrase that was shared on social media about NASA's Opportunity rover project, which ceased communications from Mars in 2018.

Elizabeth Carter is a project scientist in the Robotics Institute in Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science. "I saw the social media response to Opportunity's mission officially ending, and people were posting all over Facebook and Twitter about how sad they were, and I was surprised by how similar it seemed to when a celebrity passes away," she said.

To determine if average users could tell the difference between tweets about robots, humans, animals and objects, her research team presented a user group with samples of deidentified tweets about various "deaths." These included people like Mac Miller, animals like Grumpy Cat and robots like Opportunity and Jibo.

The researchers found that people often had a difficult time discerning the subject type of robot-related tweets, especially when it came to Opportunity. "Oppy" tweets were mistaken for being about a human 63% of the time. The pronoun "you" was used in more than half of the sampled tweets about Opportunity. Among those, 72% were directed at the rover, with others directed at NASA and its scientists.

Since Opportunity landed on Mars in 2004, many people have learned about the rover in school and followed its research findings. Carter speculates that, as was the case with her, the project inspired many people around the world. "It's nice that so many people cared so much about a research project that they took to social media to respond to its completion," she said. Carter said it illustrates the importance of educational programs and public outreach for science projects.

Carter said there has been a lot of research in lab studies about how people anthropomorphize robots, but since many people don't have robots in their homes, there hasn't been much opportunity to see how people respond outside the lab. "It's hard to study these types of things out in the world, and this was a unique opportunity to at least see how people talk about robots in these circumstances," she said.

"Death of a Robot: Social Media Reactions and Language Usage When a Robot Stops Operating" is co-written by Samantha Reig, Xiang Zhi Tan, Gierad Laput, Stephanie Rosenthal, and Aaron Steinfeld, all of Carnegie Mellon University. The paper was presented earlier this year at the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction.

For More Information

Byron Spice | 412-268-9068 | bspice@cs.cmu.edu<br>Virginia Alvino Young | 412-268-8356 | vay@cmu.edu