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Making robots emotion-sensitive - preliminary experiments and results

P. Arockia Jansi Rani, Nilanjan Sarkar

Year
2006
Citations
10

Abstract

It is well known that implicit communication between the communicators plays a significant role in social interactions. It would be immensely useful to have a robotic system that is capable of such implicit communication with the operator and can modify its behavior if required. This paper presents a framework for human-robot interaction in which the operator's physiological signals were analyzed to infer his/her probable anxiety level and robot behavior was adapted as a function of the operator affective state. Peripheral physiological signals were measured through wearable biofeedback sensors and a control architecture inspired by Riley's original information-flow model was developed to implement such human-robot interaction. The target affective state chosen in this work was anxiety. The results from affect-elicitation tasks for human participants showed that it is possible to detect anxiety through physiological sensing in real-time. A robotic experiment was also conducted to demonstrate that the presented control architecture allowed the robot to adapt its behavior based on operator anxiety level.

Keywords

RobotComputer scienceHuman–computer interactionArtificial intelligence

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