Home /Research /Why robots should be technical
HRI

Why robots should be technical

Lukas Hindemith, Jan Philip Göpfert, Christiane B. Wiebel-Herboth, Britta Wrede, Anna-Lisa Vollmer

Year
2021
Citations
12

Abstract

Abstract Research in social robotics is commonly focused on designing robots that imitate human behavior. While this might increase a user’s satisfaction and acceptance of robots at first glance, it does not automatically aid a non-expert user in naturally interacting with robots, and might hurt their ability to correctly anticipate a robot’s capabilities. We argue that a faulty mental model, that the user has of the robot, is one of the main sources of confusion. In this work, we investigate how communicating technical concepts of robotic systems to users affect their mental models, and how this can increase the quality of human-robot interaction. We conducted an online study and investigated possible ways of improving users’ mental models. Our results underline that communicating technical concepts can form an improved mental model. Consequently, we show the importance of consciously designing robots that express their capabilities and limitations.

Keywords

RobotHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceRoboticsConfusionQuality (philosophy)Artificial intelligenceMental modelHuman–robot interactionSocial robot

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers