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Movement Times in Inter- and Intrapersonal Human Coordination

Cordula Vesper, Sonja Stork, Anna Schubö

Year
2008
Citations
5

Abstract

The present study examines how humans adapt their movements when interacting with another person. Different parameters of pick-and-place movements of the same person are compared in situations where the person works alone (intrapersonal coordination) and when the person is working with a partner (interpersonal coordination). Results show an overall increase in movement speed during the interpersonal condition and a reduced relative movement onset compared to the intrapersonal condition. The findings are discussed withrespect to implications for the design of adaptive robots with the aim to improve human-robot interaction.

Keywords

Intrapersonal communicationMovement (music)Interpersonal communicationRobotComputer sciencePsychologyCognitive psychologyHuman–robot interactionHuman–computer interactionSocial psychology

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