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Emotionally expressive robot behavior improves human-robot collaboration

Jekaterina Novikova, Leon Watts, Tetsunari Inamura

Year
2015
Citations
13

Abstract

In order to improve human-robot collaboration, it is necessary to consider how robots may be able to act in a way that is understandable to the people with whom they are working. This paper presents a preliminary experimental human-robot collaboration study with 10 human subjects. The paper analyzes the effect of a robot's emotionally expressive non-verbal behavior on human-robot teamwork. The study was modeled and performed in the immersive simulator SIGVerse. The findings of the study reveal that embodied emotional expressiveness improves the integration of human-robot activity. The results of the study show that embodied expressiveness increases the duration of the activities that have a positive value for the collaborative task. The embodied expressiveness also has a significant influence on the distance between human-robot collaborators.

Keywords

Embodied cognitionRobotHuman–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionComputer scienceTeamworkTask (project management)Behavior-based roboticsArtificial intelligencePsychology

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