Regional differences in public perceptions of autonomous vehicles facing moral dilemmas : A comparative study between the United States, Hong Kong, and China

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages9
Journal / PublicationUniversal Access in the Information Society
Online published20 Aug 2024
Publication statusOnline published - 20 Aug 2024

Abstract

In an online experiment, 1,500 adult residents from the United States, Hong Kong, and China were exposed to four variations of a dilemma that required a driver in an autonomous vehicle or the vehicle itself to make a passenger-protective (i.e., protecting the vehicle passenger by sacrificing a pedestrian) or a pedestrian-protective (i.e., protecting a pedestrian by sacrificing the vehicle passenger) moral decision. The results indicated that the types of moral dilemmas and moral decision-makers had no significant effects on ethical judgment and attitudes toward autonomous vehicles as well as purchase intentions, perceived intelligence, and safety. However, regional differences played a key role in influencing these measured variables. Additionally, the varying levels of collectivism in the three regions emerged as a potential underlying mechanism to explain the regional differences. © The Author(s)

Research Area(s)

  • Autonomous vehicle, Moral dilemma, Ethical judgment, Regional difference, Collectivism

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