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How humans behave and evaluate a social robot in real-environment settings

Published: 25 August 2010 Publication History

Abstract

Behavioral analysis has proven to be an important method to study human-robot interaction in real-life environments providing highly relevant insights for developing new theoretical and practical models of appropriate social robot design. In this paper we describe our approach to study human-robot interaction by combining human behavioral analysis with robot evaluation results. The approach is exemplified by a case study performed with a social robot receptionist in real-life settings. Our preliminary results are encouraging, as many behavior categories could be successfully related to certain evaluation patterns. With our analysis we hope to add a useful contribution to social-robotic design concerning user modeling issues and evaluation predictions.

References

[1]
Sabanovic, S,. M. P. Michalowski, R. Simmons "Robots in the Wild Observing Human-Robot Social Interaction Outside the Lab" Proc. of AMC'o6 Istanbul, 2006
[2]
Watanabe, T., M. Okubo, and H. Ogawa, "A speech driven embodied interaction robots system for human communication support," in Proc. of Int. Conf. on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 2000
[3]
Breazeal, C, C. D. Kidd, A. L. Thomaz, G. Hoffman, and M. Berlin, "Effects of nonverbal communication on efficiency and robustness in human-robot teamwork," in Proc. of IROS, Barcelona, 2005

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ECCE '10: Proceedings of the 28th Annual European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics
August 2010
380 pages
ISBN:9781605589466
DOI:10.1145/1962300
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

Sponsors

  • TNO: Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research
  • EACE: European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 25 August 2010

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Author Tags

  1. behavioral analysis
  2. non-laboratory environment
  3. quantitative evaluation
  4. social robots

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  • Research-article

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ECCE '10
Sponsor:
  • TNO
  • EACE
ECCE '10: European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics
August 25 - 27, 2010
Delft, Netherlands

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Overall Acceptance Rate 56 of 91 submissions, 62%

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