Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Virtual Reality
  4. News

Uncanny Valley of the mind: When emotional AI gets too human-like, it creeps humans out

Add as a preferred source on Google

In 1970, roboticist Masahiro Mori coined the term “uncanny valley” to explain how machines will suddenly and drastically creep a lot of people out as they become more humanlike. Eventually, as the robots are refined, they’ll emerge from the valley and be met with more positive responses, but the valley has nonetheless been established as an obstacle for developers who want to create lifelike androids.

Though Mori’s uncanny valley is concerned with a replica’s physical form, new research suggests that there’s also a valley to be overcome when it comes to a bot’s intellect.

Recommended Videos

In a paper published this month in the journal Cognition, researchers Jan-Phillip Stein and Peter Ohler present what they’ve termed the “uncanny valley of the mind,” in which participants reported being feelings of unease when faced with relatively intelligent avatars.

In their study, Stein and Ohler asked 92 participants to wear a virtual reality headset and watch the same scene of avatars making small talk. However, the participants were given one of four different scenarios. One group was told the avatars were human-controlled and that the conversations were scripted. Another group was told the avatars were human-controlled and that the conversations were created by an artificial intelligence. A third group was told the avatars were computer-controlled and that the conversation was scripted. The final group was told the avatars were computer-controlled and that the conversations were created by AI.

J.-P.Stein, P. Ohler., Cognition 160 (March 2017) © Elsevier B.V.
J.-P.Stein, P. Ohler., Cognition 160 (March 2017) © Elsevier B.V.

The last group reported an eerier response from watching the scene than the other participants. Even though the characters and the scenes were the same, the thought that a natural-sounding dialogue was created by a computer seemed to creep people out.

“You would think that after the friendly and chatty dialogue, there couldn’t be such a strong sense of unease towards these virtual entities, and yet some of our students reported strong discomfort as the characters moved closer to them,” Stein told Digital Trends.

Stein suggested that the reason for such unease could come from the participants feeling challenged about what makes us unique as humans.

“You could call it ethical taboo or an injury to narcissism,” he said. “People regard some concepts as distinctively human…and dislike it when other beings conquer these domains. It makes them feel that they’ve lost part of their superiority, and I believe that this basically means a loss of control. ‘What if the machine doesn’t feel like obeying me?’

“Something that we regard as intrinsically human is taken away,” he added, “and at the same time, we might have to worry about the immediate consequences to our safety. Hard not to feel a little tingly about that.”

To avoid the classical (physical) uncanny valley, roboticists sometimes develop replicas that are obviously not human, such as by making them look overly cute, cartoonish, or by revealing their inner wires and mechanics. Stein suggested developers could also create emotionally aware technology to seem distinctively robotic.

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
OpenAI reveals its most advanced GPT-5.6 model, but you can’t access it yet
GPT-5.6 brings new reasoning, autonomy, and cybersecurity capabilities, but its rollout is currently limited to government-approved customers.
OpenAI ChatGPT 5.6 Sol Terra Luna Announced

OpenAI has officially taken the wraps off GPT-5.6, its most advanced family of AI models to date. There's just one catch: unless you're one of a handful of approved customers, you won't be able to try it anytime soon. Instead of a broad launch, the company is beginning with a tightly controlled preview while it works through a new U.S. government review process.

GPT-5.6 is here, but only a few people can use it

Read more
Bacteria could be the secret sauce to keeping your computers cool
Scientists find bacteria can grow thermal materials that outperform current cooling tech.
The Zotac RTX 5070 Ti Amp Extreme Infinity plugged into a white gaming PC

Your PC and laptop runs hotter every year, especially now that AI tools and heavy software push it harder than ever. Heat is a real bottleneck for performance, which is why people have gone to wild lengths to solve it, like strapping an actual ice machine to an RTX GPU. A new study points to a far less extreme fix for this problem, and it involves bacteria (via TechXplore).

Researchers have developed a new way to grow thermal interface materials, the substances that sit between a chip and its cooling system to help heat escape faster. The process involves feeding bacteria sugar and metal ions, letting the microbes build the material naturally instead of relying on traditional chemical manufacturing.

Read more
Bored of reading papers? This AI tool turns them into TikTok-like videos
PaperTok brings academic papers to people with short attention spans
Head, Person, Face

Academic papers aren't what you'd consider a fun read. For the average person, the dense, long, and field-specific language-filled papers can be quite intimidating to get into. These are usually packaged as PDFs that look like they were designed to test your willpower. A group of University of Washington researchers thinks there may be a better way to get that work in front of regular people. They are turning the papers into short-form videos.

The tool is called PaperTok, and it uses AI to help researchers convert academic papers into short, social-friendly videos. Think TikTok, except the idea is to explain research instead of sharing brain-rotting content. The best part? PaperTok is building a platform around scientists and researchers who are involved in the process, rather than simply using AI to summarize these papers.

Read more