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Every Tool in Its Place: Interaction and Collaboration with Robotic Drawers

Brian Mok, Stephen Yang, David Sirkin, Wendy Ju

Year
2015
Citations
2

Abstract

In this study, we examined how participants (N = 20) interacted and collaborated with a set of robotic drawers to accomplish a building task. The drawers’ behavior varied along two variables — proactive/reactive and expressive/nonexpressive motions. The results of our study indicated that participants considered an expressive robot to be more involved and interested in the interaction. They also found that while proactive or expressive robots could dominate the interaction, proactivity might negatively affect the participants’ perception of their social status relative to that of the robot’s, while expressiveness did not. This shows the importance of utilizing expressive movements when designing robots that collaborate with human users.

Keywords

ProactivityRobotHuman–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionSet (abstract data type)PerceptionTask (project management)Computer scienceAffect (linguistics)Social relation

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