Related Concept Videos
Socioemotional Development during Infancy
Primary Temperament Types
Socioemotional Experience and Gender Development
Erikson's Theory on Socioemotional Development during Childhood
The first four of Erikson's eight...
The Sense of Self: Reflected Self-Appraisal and Social Comparison
Bullying
Stereotype Content Model
You might also read
Related Articles
Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.
Early language skills and later internalizing and externalizing behaviours: associations through core and pragmatic language.
Children's attribution of mental states to humans and social robots assessed with the Theory of Mind Scale.
Children's anthropomorphism of inanimate agents.
Related Experiment Video
Updated: Aug 4, 2025

SSVEP-based Experimental Procedure for Brain-Robot Interaction with Humanoid Robots
Published on: November 24, 2015
Of children and social robots.
Elizabeth J Goldman1, Anna-Elisabeth Baumann1, Diane Poulin-Dubois1
1Centre for Research in Human Development, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC H4B 1R6, Canada elizabeth.godman@concorida.ca; anna-elisabeth.baumann@mail.concordia.ca; Diane.PoulinDubois@concordia.cahttps://www.concordia.ca/artsci/psychology/research/cognitive-language-development-lab.html.
Children interact with social robots similarly to humans. Their understanding of robots as non-living artifacts develops gradually throughout the preschool years, according to a literature review.
More Related Videos
Area of Science:
- Child Development
- Human-Robot Interaction
- Artificial Intelligence Ethics
Background:
- Limited understanding exists regarding how children perceive social robots.
- Social robots are increasingly integrated into various aspects of daily life, including child-directed applications.
- Previous research has not comprehensively synthesized findings on infant and child interactions with robots.
Purpose of the Study:
- To review and synthesize existing literature on children's perceptions and interactions with social robots.
- To identify developmental trends in how children understand robots.
- To highlight gaps in current knowledge regarding child-robot relationships.
Main Methods:
- Systematic literature review of studies involving infants and young children interacting with robots.
- Analysis of interaction patterns and qualitative/quantitative data from existing research.
- Synthesis of findings to identify commonalities and developmental trajectories.
Main Results:
- Infants and young children treat social robots as social agents, mirroring interactions with humans.
- Children's cognitive distinction between robots as artifacts and living beings emerges gradually.
- The development of this understanding is observed during the preschool years (approximately ages 3-5).
Conclusions:
- Children's early interactions with robots are fundamentally social.
- The conceptualization of robots as non-living artifacts is a developmental milestone achieved during early childhood.
- Further research is needed to explore the nuances of children's long-term perceptions and the ethical implications of human-robot interaction in development.

