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Socially Compliant Human-Robot Interaction for Autonomous Scanning Tasks in Supermarket Environments

Benjamin Lewandowski, Tim Wengefeld, Sabine Müller, Mathias Jenny, Sebastian Glende, Christof Schröter, A. Bley, Horst–Michael Groß

Year
2020
Citations
28

Abstract

In this paper, we present a system for socially aware robot navigation for a wide range of service tasks in supermarkets. It comprises modules for real-time person detection and tracking to gain situation awareness, modules to react to situations, and means for human-robot communication. The technical performance of the situation awareness was evaluated in a shelf out-of-stock (SOOS) detection scenario under real-world conditions in a supermarket in Germany. Furthermore, in order to investigate whether and to what extent our social navigation strategy can improve the acceptance and application of a mobile service robot in a supermarket, we have conducted surveys with N = 60 participants and usability tests with N =8 participants during a three-day field test. We can show that a robot for SOOS detection operating in a supermarket during the opening hours is generally accepted by customers and that the integration of a real-time person perception is crucial, especially for keeping appropriate distances to persons and for improving user-centered communication. Furthermore, our results indicate that various communication channels (e.g. speech, a video projector, and LED lights) are beneficial in order to address a wider user group in the targeted supermarket setting.

Keywords

UsabilityRobotHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceHuman–robot interactionMobile robotPerceptionArtificial intelligencePsychology

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