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Taking a leap of faith: insights from UK first responders on instantaneous trust

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posted on 2025-07-24, 11:31 authored by Elena NicheleElena Nichele, Sachini Weerawardhana, Yang LuYang Lu
<p dir="ltr">Autonomous systems’ potential to instruct the public during real-life emergencies to foster instantaneous trust and compliance and their impact on rescue operations remain largely unexplored. To determine the requirements for designing technologies capable of delivering instructions in high-risk situations, we needed to understand the key communication elements for establishing immediate trust dynamics, ultimately fostering compliance and contributing to effective life-saving efforts. This paper adopts a participatory approach to curate perspectives from emergency rescue professionals in the UK, gathered through a survey, whose responses were analysed to identify the themes in the dataset and ultimately to elicit verbal and nonverbal elements and message delivery techniques to address the challenges to compliance in interpersonal communication during emergencies. Participants indicated that the adoption of autonomous systems for communication could positively impact rescue operations. They highlighted that verbal communications need to be concise and informative, while nonverbal cues must effectively reinforce verbal messages under distressful conditions. However, challenges such as accountability, adaptability, reliability, and affordability are still prevalent. We formalise a novel communication model designed to engender instantaneous trust between the rescuer and the rescued. We find that verbal elements in the model must increase the situational awareness of the rescued and sufficiently inform them of the context. In contrast, the nonverbal elements should foster credibility, consistency, reliability and positivity between the communicating parties. Based on the professionals’ responses, we further advance recommendations for the use of autonomous systems in emergency rescue scenarios in terms of increasing accountability and accessibility.</p>

Funding

UKRI Trustworthy Autonomous Systems Hub

UK Research and Innovation

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History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln International Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications

Volume

12

Pages/Article Number

856

Publisher

Springer Nature

eISSN

2662-9992

Date Accepted

2025-06-08

Date of First Publication

2025-06-18

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A

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