Grimwade's Syndrome: Difference between revisions
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''An in-joke reference to production assistant Peter Grimwade (later to become a director and writer on the series) who had bemoaned the fact that the stories on which he was assigned to work almost always involved robots. However, the description of robophobia given by the Doctor in fact coincides with a real-life phenomenon called the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncanny_valley Uncanny Valley]. '' |
Revision as of 00:10, 6 May 2009
Grimwade's Syndrome, sometimes called Robophobia is a psychological condition among humans that have frequent contact with androids and robots, commonly attributed to the androids moving like humans, but without any of the characteristic and subtle movements associated with humans. In the mind of the afflicted, they appear to be "surrounded by walking talking dead men." (The Doctor, DW: The Robots of Death)
In the context of the series, the undercover agent Poul is himself already uncomfortable with robots and has a breakdown, after finding blood spatters on the hands of a smashed robot. He spends much of the remainder of the story trying to hide from the robots of the Sandminer.
An in-joke reference to production assistant Peter Grimwade (later to become a director and writer on the series) who had bemoaned the fact that the stories on which he was assigned to work almost always involved robots. However, the description of robophobia given by the Doctor in fact coincides with a real-life phenomenon called the Uncanny Valley.