Use of Winsome Robots for Understanding Human Feedback (UWU)
Jessica Eggers, Angela Dai, Matthew C. Gombolay
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
As social robots become more common, many have adopted cute aesthetics aiming to enhance user comfort and acceptance. However, the effect of this aesthetic choice on human feedback in reinforcement learning scenarios remains unclear. Previous research has shown that humans tend to give more positive than negative feedback, which can cause failure to reach optimal robot behavior. We hypothesize that this positive bias may be exacerbated by the robot's level of perceived cuteness. To investigate, we conducted a user study where participants critique a robot's trajectories while it performs a task. We then analyzed the impact of the robot's aesthetic cuteness on the type of participant feedback. Our results suggest that there is a shift in the ratio of positive to negative feedback when perceived cuteness changes. In light of this, we experiment with a stochastic version of TAMER which adapts based on the user's level of positive feedback bias to mitigate these effects.
Keywords
Related papers
The Uncanny Valley [From the Field]
Masahiro Mori, Karl F. MacDorman, Norri Kageki
2012
Measurement Instruments for the Anthropomorphism, Animacy, Likeability, Perceived Intelligence, and Perceived Safety of Robots
Christoph Bartneck, Dana Kulić, Elizabeth A. Croft +1 more
2008
The development of Honda humanoid robot
Kazuo Hirai, Masato Hirose, Y. Haikawa +1 more
2002
A Meta-Analysis of Factors Affecting Trust in Human-Robot Interaction
Peter A. Hancock, Deborah R. Billings, Kristin E. Schaefer +3 more
2011