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Natural Human-Robot Interaction Using Social Cues

Published: 07 March 2016 Publication History

Abstract

This paper investigates the problem of how humans understand and control human-robot collaborative action and how to build natural interactions during human-robot collaborative action. We use a "pick and place" experiment to study collaborative activities between a human and a robot. The results show that even if human participants had a good understanding of the maximum reachability of the robot, they consistently take a surprisingly long time to help and assist the robot when a target object is out of its reach. We implemented a number of social cues in the experiment, analysed their effects in order to identify the role they could play to improve the fluency of human-robot collaboration. The experimental results showed that when the robot uses head movements, two hands or a gesture to indicate non-reachability, people react in a more natural way to assist the robot.

References

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Stoffregen, T., Gorday, K., Sheng, Y., & Flynn, S. (1999). Perceiving affordances for another person's actions. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 25, 120--136.
[2]
Hirose, N. (2002). An ecological approach to embodiment and cognition. Cognitive Systems Research,3.
[3]
Tehran J. Davis (2009), Perceiving Affordances for Joint Action
[4]
Norman, D. A. (1990). The 'problem' with automation: inappropriate feedback and interaction, not 'over-automation'. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Bio Sc, 327(1241), 585--593.
[5]
Sahin, E., Cakmak, M., Dogar, M., Ugur, E., & Ucoluk, G.(2007). To afford or not to afford: A new formalization of affordances toward affordance-based robot control.
[6]
Elisabeth Pacherie (2012), The Phenomenology of Joint Action: Self-Agency vs. Joint-Agency

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Published In

cover image ACM Conferences
HRI '16: The Eleventh ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human Robot Interaction
March 2016
676 pages
ISBN:9781467383707

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In-Cooperation

  • AAAI: American Association for Artificial Intelligence
  • Human Factors & Ergonomics Soc: Human Factors & Ergonomics Soc

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IEEE Press

Publication History

Published: 07 March 2016

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Author Tags

  1. affordance
  2. collaboration
  3. human-robot collaboration
  4. human-robot-interaction
  5. joint action
  6. natural interaction
  7. social cues

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HRI '16
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HRI '16 Paper Acceptance Rate 45 of 181 submissions, 25%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 268 of 1,124 submissions, 24%

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