Module C Summer 2013
Who do we trust? by Sara Parker What the results of the experiment were. Why people decided to be in the experiment Why the experiment was done. How many people were in the experiment To help them get to know each other. To learn what the students talked about. To report what their conversations were about. To find out which movement caused distrust. How did the researchers get the information they needed from the students' conversations? Give TWO answers. Complete the sentences:The researchers.....The researchers ..... According to lines 6-14, what is the most important finding in the first part of the experiment? The two parts of the experiment had the same results. This shows us that...(lines 6-24) the researchers are not trustworthy. the movements influenced the students and not who made them. the results of this experiment are not significant. most students do not trust robots. What else can we learn from this experiment? (lines 21-24) How we are different from robots. How to choose a workplace Why we may distrust someone we don't know well. Why people trust robots. How are the results of the experiment influencing Dr. Jackson's work? Put a V by the TWO correct answersHow may this research be used in the future? It could help us... trust others more easily find workers we can trust connect robots and people keep public places safe build more friendly robots use robots at airports