Carried out by the HumanTech Center at SWPS University, in collaboration with the robotics team at NCBR Ideas in Warsaw, the study offers some interesting insights about respondents' approach to artificial intelligence.
For example, it reveals that women have more negative emotions than men towards robots, and that it is easier for Poles to accept a humanoid robot than other machines.
It also finds that Poles accept robots as something that provides a service and does not control them, which means more like a shopping assistant rather than a teacher.
"Looking at our data, we may say that Polish society accepts robots in the kitchen, for example, or in a shop as something that can provide services, but not control us," Konrad Maj head of the HumanTech Center at the SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Warsaw, told Radio Poland's Danuta Isler.
"We don't like being controlled by them," he added.
Click on the audio player above to listen.