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What Communication Modalities Do Users Prefer in Real Time HRI?

Ori Novanda, Maha Salem, Joe Saunders, Michael L. Walters, Kerstin Dautenhahn

Year
2016
Access
Open access

Abstract

This paper investigates users' preferred interaction modalities when playing an imitation game with KASPAR, a small child-sized humanoid robot. The study involved 16 adult participants teaching the robot to mime a nursery rhyme via one of three interaction modalities in a real-time Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) experiment: voice, guiding touch and visual demonstration. The findings suggest that the users appeared to have no preference in terms of human effort for completing the task. However, there was a significant difference in human enjoyment preferences of input modality and a marginal difference in the robot's perceived ability to imitate.

Keywords

cs.ROcs.HC

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