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Improving the human-robot interaction through emotive movements: a special case: walking

Matthieu Destephe, Takayaki Maruyama, Massimiliano Zecca, Kenji Hashimoto, Atsuo Takanishi

Year
2013
Citations
6

Abstract

Walking is one of the most common activities that we perform every day. If the main goal of walking is to go from a point A to a point B, walking can also convey emotional clues in social context. Those clues can be used to improve interactions or any messages we want to express. We observed a professional actress perform emotive walking and analyzed the recorded data. For each emotion, we found characteristic features which can be used to model gait patterns for humanoid robots. The findings were assessed by subjects who were asked to recognize the emotions displayed in the acts of walking.

Keywords

EmotiveHumanoid robotContext (archaeology)RobotMovement (music)Computer sciencePoint (geometry)Human–computer interactionGaitHuman–robot interaction

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