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People commented that they felt emotions for their stuffed animals, plants, furniture and even the voice behind their phone’s GPS. “We’re sort of hardwired to connect with other people, and sometimes that extends to other (things) who aren’t people,” Shepard said. Anthropomorphizing household objectsWhen people feel sympathy for inanimate objects, they are anthropomorphizing, attributing human behaviors or feelings to animals or objects who cannot feel the same emotions as we do, Shepard said. When Wilde first shared the video, she thought she might be the only one who experienced emotions for the unassuming objects, she said. These AI companions are becoming increasingly popular, but experts don’t yet know how these bots can affect someone’s development or psychology, Wei said.
Persons: Lilianna Wilde, jean, Wilde, Melissa Shepard, ” Shepard, Shepard, Kim Egel, ” Egel, , who’s, ’ ” Wilde, it’s, It’s, , hasn’t, ” Wilde, Anthropomorphizing, anthropomorphizing, Marlynn Wei, Wei, We’re Organizations: CNN, NASA Locations: Maryland, California, , New York
The resulting creation, a Wilson Staff Dyna-Power 6-iron head, was tucked away in Shepard’s space suit for launch, with a few balls hidden in a sock. “Miles and miles and miles,” the jubilant astronaut remarked as the ball sailed out of his view, swallowed by the infinite blackness of space. What does any of that have to do with an astronaut playing golf on the moon? Saunders believed Shepard’s “miles and miles” remark to have been made tongue-in-cheek, an almost instinctive reflex of his hyper-competitive, “fighter-jock” nature. “We always talk about getting to the moon, landing on the moon, returning back to Earth – that’s how we think of the moon,” Odom said.
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