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User experience of conveying emotions by touch

Beatrice Alenljung, Rebecca Andreasson, Erik Billing, Jessica Lindblom, Robert Lowe

Year
2017
Citations
14

Abstract

In the present study, 64 users were asked to convey eight distinct emotion to a humanoid Nao robot via touch, and were then asked to evaluate their experiences of performing that task. Large differences between emotions were revealed. Users perceived conveying of positive/pro-social emotions as significantly easier than negative emotions, with love and disgust as the two extremes. When asked whether they would act differently towards a human, compared to the robot, the users' replies varied. A content analysis of interviews revealed a generally positive user experience (UX) while interacting with the robot, but users also found the task challenging in several ways. Three major themes with impact on the UX emerged; responsiveness, robustness, and trickiness. The results are discussed in relation to a study of human-human affective tactile interaction, with implications for human-robot interaction (HRI) and design of social and affective robotics in particular.

Keywords

Humanoid robotDisgustHuman–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionTask (project management)PsychologySocial robotRobotUser experience designCognitive psychology

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