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Implicit Communication in a Joint Action

Ross A. Knepper, Christoforos Mavrogiannis, Julia Proft, Claire Liang

Year
2017
Citations
69

Abstract

Robots must be cognizant of how their actions will be interpreted in context. Actions performed in the context of a joint activity comprise two aspects: functional and communicative. The functional component achieves the goal of the action, whereas its communicative component, when present, expresses some information to the actor's partners in the joint activity. The interpretation of such communication requires leveraging information that is public to all participants, known as common ground. Much of human communication is performed through this implicit mechanism, and humans cannot help but infer some meaning -- whether or not it was intended by the actor -- from most actions. We present a framework for robots to utilize this communicative channel on top of normal functional actions to work more effectively with human partners. We consider the role of the actor and the observer, both individually and jointly, in implicit communication, as well as the effects of timing. We also show how the framework maps onto various modes of action, including natural language and motion. We consider these modes of action in various human-robot interaction domains, including social navigation and collaborative assembly.

Keywords

Computer scienceAction (physics)Context (archaeology)Human–computer interactionMeaning (existential)RobotComponent (thermodynamics)Joint attentionHuman–robot interactionJoint (building)

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