Virtual reenactment of the Milgram Obedience Experiments

Virtual reenactment of the Milgram Obedience Experiments: “

0avatardrea.jpgA thought-provoking experiment has demonstrated not only that cyberspace can be used to overcome ethical constraints in experiments but also how some of us are reluctant at the idea of torturing a virtual character.

Stanley Milgram’s 1960s experimental findings that people would administer apparently lethal electric shocks to a stranger at the behest of an authority figure remain critical for understanding obedience. Due to ethical reasons, it is nowadays impossible to carry out direct experimental studies in this area.

Mel Slater and his colleagues at University College London have used VR to reenact the Milgram’s experiment. Their objective was to uncover the extent to which participants would respond to the situation as if it were real in spite of their knowledge that no real events were taking place.

Participants were invited to administer memory tests to an avatar. When she gave an incorrect answer, the participants were instructed to administer an ‘electric shock’ to her, augmenting the voltage each time. She responded with increasing discomfort and protests. Of the 34 participants, 23 saw and heard the virtual human, and 11 communicated with her only through a text interface.

The participants who saw and heard her tended to respond to the situation at the subjective, behavioural and physiological levels as if it were real. Six of them chose to stop the experiment before it was due to end. A further 6 said it had occurred to them to stop early because they had negative feelings about what was happening. By contrast, of the eleven participants who only interacted with the (unseen) woman by text, just one stopped the experiment early, and no others said it had occurred to them to stop.

Participants who could see and hear the avatar were affected by the experiment as if it were real. Their stress responses were raised (as judged by sweating and heart rate). And when the woman protested, the participants tended to give her longer to answer before administering the shock. Some participants emphasised the correct answer among the available choices, as if trying to help the woman avoid a shock.0milgrrrm.jpg

As Yishay Mor notes, the results put in a new light the idea that we should give human rights to sentient machines.

Image on the right from the movie I comme Icare

Videos related to Milgram experiment. Videos of the Virtual re-enactment of the obedience experiment.
Paper in PLoS ONE.
BoingBoing also points to another Milgram Reenactment, this time by Eric Paulos.

(Via we make money not art.)

Related Posts

  • No Related Post



Leave a Reply

R-Echos

Since 2004, R-Echos is an experimental online magazine dedicated to republication; topics vary from biology to graphic design, from ecology to business. It agglomerates anything which is about art, computing, science. His form is made out of collages of texts, links, images, references, videos and sounds - choosen with care to take part to this very personnal publication.

* Electronest

websites and White Cubes

websites and White Cubes

Dumb sign, originally uploaded by blackbeltjones.
Been asked to work on the nominations for designs of the year again at the Design Museum, which is very nice.But it leads me back to this hoary old question – how should interactive work best be shown in a museum or gallery context? Should it be [...]

Continue your reading of websites and White Cubes
R-Echos issue 1 - AMP001

R-Echos issue 1

An experiment in the economics of production: how can we shift focus from consumption of a finished product to investment in the processes of design, print & production?

This is a poster and a text: an analog R-Echos
Would you be interested in investing in the tangible production of this work?
1. You can download the digital archive
and [...]

Continue your reading of R-Echos issue 1

What if, VACANT LOT, Hoxton, London

What if, VACANT LOT, Hoxton, London

Related PostsBuilding and designing Digitalism’s IdealisticThe best CNC project machines - Hack a Daygreenpix zero-energy massive LED displayDIY Blubber BotBotanicalls Twitter DIYBuild Your Own War Bot - Wired How-To WikiHOW TO - Embroider digital imagesThe Shipyard ReturnsBottoms Up DoorbellThey were flexible in the fifties tooThe Magic Roundabout, SwindonPrintBot [...]

Continue your reading of What if, VACANT LOT, Hoxton, London

  • About
  • Articles
  • Beta version
  • Categories
  • Defragmentation
  • Index
  • Monthly Archives
  • R-Echos issue 1
  • Somewhere else
  • Tags
  • Visual Index
  • Visualisation
  • Collections

  • Displaying
  • un-Realisation
  • Physical Interface
  • Augmented Reality
  • Publishing
  • Geometry
  • Visualisation
  • Subscribe in a reader

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner