Home /Research /How Does It Feel to Clap Hands with a Robot?
HRI

How Does It Feel to Clap Hands with a Robot?

Naomi T. Fitter, Katherine J. Kuchenbecker

Year
2019
Citations
29
Access
Open access

Abstract

Future robots may need lighthearted physical interaction capabilities to connect with people in meaningful ways. To begin exploring how users perceive playful human-robot hand-to-hand interaction, we conducted a study with 20 participants. Each user played simple hand-clapping games with the Rethink Robotics Baxter Research Robot during a 1-h-long session involving 24 randomly ordered conditions that varied in facial reactivity, physical reactivity, arm stiffness, and clapping tempo. Survey data and experiment recordings demonstrate that this interaction is viable: all users successfully completed the experiment and mentioned enjoying at least one game without prompting. Hand-clapping tempo was highly salient to users, and human-like robot errors were more widely accepted than mechanical errors. Furthermore, perceptions of Baxter varied in the following statistically significant ways: facial reactivity increased the robot’s perceived pleasantness and energeticness; physical reactivity decreased pleasantness, energeticness, and dominance; higher arm stiffness increased safety and decreased dominance; and faster tempo increased energeticness and increased dominance. These findings can motivate and guide roboticists who want to design social-physical human-robot interactions.

Keywords

Dominance (genetics)RobotRoboticsReactivity (psychology)PsychologyPerceptionHuman–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionCognitive psychologyArtificial intelligence

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers