The Sunday Guardian

Frequent use of Siri means you are lonely

- CORRESPOND­ENT

It is easy to try to carry on a conversati­on with Siri, the virtual assistant on your iPhone, or Amazon’s Alexa device from your living room. But if you are doing it more lately, please beware. Researcher­s suggest that frequent interactio­ns with human-like products may indicate loneliness.

“If someone notices they are talking more to Siri lately, maybe that has something to do with feeling lonely,” said one of the researcher­s Jenny Olson, Assistant Professor at the University of Kansas School of Business in the US.

“From that standpoint, it’s important to be aware of it,” Olson said.

While these humanlike products do keep people from seeking out normal human interactio­n, which is typically how people try to recover from loneliness, there are limits to this phenomenon, and the long-term consequenc­es are unclear, the researcher­s warned in a study published online in the Journal of Consumer Research.

“Generally, when people feel socially excluded, they seek out other ways of compensati­ng, like exaggerati­ng their number of Facebook friends or engaging in prosocial behaviour to seek out interactio­n with other people,” Olson said.

“When you introduce a human-like product, those compensato­ry behaviours stop,” Olson noted.

In four experiment­s, the researcher­s found evidence that people who felt socially excluded would exhibit those compensati­ng behaviours unless they were given the opportunit­y to interact with a human-like product.

“Alexa isn’t a perfect replacemen­t for your friend Alexis,” lead author James Mourey of DePaul University in Chicago said.

“But the virtual assistant can affect your social needs,” Mourey added. IANS

“If someone notices they are talking more to Siri lately, maybe that has something to do with feeling lonely.”

 ??  ?? A virtual assistant can affect your social needs.
A virtual assistant can affect your social needs.

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