Touching an Android robot: Would you do it and how?
Kerstin S. Haring, Katsumi Watanabe, David Silvera‐Tawil, Mari Velonaki, Yoshio Matsumoto
- Year
- 2015
- Citations
- 11
Abstract
As the presence of robots in everyday life becomes more common, it is expected that interactions between humans and robots will include the modality of touch. To date, however, little research has been conducted on tactile interactions between humans and anthropomorphic robots. This study investigates human induced tactile interaction with an android robot. To facilitate data analysis, existing touch dictionaries were revised and adapted for the specifics of human-android interaction. By measuring the participants' personality traits and their perception of the robot, it was found that some tactile gestures are related to participants' personality traits, such as neuroticism and extroversion, and others to robot attributes such as anthropomorphism and animacy. To the best of our knowledge this is the first study to report on how people touch an android robot, and the correlation that exists between the tactile gestures used and the participants' personality traits. Possible implications are discussed.
Keywords
Related papers
Artificial intelligence: a modern approach
1995
Are we ready for autonomous driving? The KITTI vision benchmark suite
Andreas Geiger, P Lenz, R. Urtasun
2012
Self-Organizing Maps
Teuvo Kohonen
1995
TensorFlow: Large-Scale Machine Learning on Heterogeneous Distributed Systems
Martı́n Abadi, Ashish Agarwal, Paul Barham +17 more
2016