Home /Research /Affect-sensitive human-robot cooperation - theory and experiments
HRI

Affect-sensitive human-robot cooperation - theory and experiments

P. Arockia Jansi Rani, Nilanjan Sarkar, Craig A. Smith

Year
2004
Citations
39

Abstract

A novel affect-sensitive human-robot cooperative framework is presented in this paper. Peripheral physiological indices are measured through wearable biofeedback sensors to detect the affective states of the human. Affect recognition is performed through both quantitative and qualitative analyses. A subsumption control architecture that is sensitive to the affective states of the human is proposed for a mobile robot. Human-robot cooperation experiments are performed where the robot senses the affective state of the human and responds appropriately. The results presented here validate the proposed framework and demonstrates a new way of achieving implicit communication between a human and a robot.

Keywords

RobotAffect (linguistics)Mobile robotHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceHuman–robot interactionWearable computerArtificial intelligenceRobot controlPsychology

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers