Spotting the Unfriendly Robot - Towards better Metrics for Interactions
Raphael Wenzel, Malte Probst
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Establishing standardized metrics for Social Robot Navigation (SRN) algorithms for assessing the quality and social compliance of robot behavior around humans is essential for SRN research. Currently, commonly used evaluation metrics lack the ability to quantify how cooperative an agent behaves in interaction with humans. Concretely, in a simple frontal approach scenario, no metric specifically captures if both agents cooperate or if one agent stays on collision course and the other agent is forced to evade. To address this limitation, we propose two new metrics, a conflict intensity metric and the responsibility metric. Together, these metrics are capable of evaluating the quality of human-robot interactions by showing how much a given algorithm has contributed to reducing a conflict and which agent actually took responsibility of the resolution. This work aims to contribute to the development of a comprehensive and standardized evaluation methodology for SRN, ultimately enhancing the safety, efficiency, and social acceptance of robots in human-centric environments.
Keywords
Related papers
Review and perspectives on multimodal perception, mutual cognition, and embodied execution for human–robot collaboration in Industry 5.0
Kai Ding, Qingyuan Mao, Yaqian Zhang +3 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Towards human-centric manufacturing: Task planning under uncertainties in human–robot collaborative assembly
Yingchao You, Ze Ji, Changyun Wei
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Agentic HRC: Achieving context alignment via memory for Human–Robot Collaboration
Jiahui Si, Wenchao Li, Xi Chen +4 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Adaptive Physics-informed Transformer with Gaussian process residual compensation for inverse dynamics modeling in Human–Robot Collaboration
Rui Qian, Xi Zhang, Dongpeng Li +2 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026