Home /Research /Distance-Based Computational Models for Facilitating Robot Interaction with Children
HRI

Distance-Based Computational Models for Facilitating Robot Interaction with Children

David Feil-Seifer, Maja Matarić

Year
2012
Citations
45
Access
Open access

Abstract

Sensing and interpreting the user's activities and social behavior, monitoring the dynamics of the social context, and selecting and producing appropriate robot action are the core challenges involved in using robots as social tools in interaction scenarios. In social human-robot interaction, speech and gesture are the commonly considered interaction modalities. In human-human interactions, interpersonal distance between people can contain significant social and communicative information. Thus, if human-robot interaction reflects this human-human interaction property, then human-robot distances also convey social information. If a robot is to be an effective social agent, its actions, including those relating to interpersonal distance, must be appropriate for the given social situation. This becomes a greater challenge in playful and unstructured interactions, such as those involving children.

Keywords

Human–robot interactionRobotModalitiesHuman–computer interactionInterpersonal communicationGestureSocial relationSocial robotComputer scienceContext (archaeology)

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers