Effects related to synchrony and repertoire in perceptions of robot dance
Eleanor Avrunin, Justin Hart, Ashley Douglas, Brian Scassellati
- 发表年份
- 2011
- 引用次数
- 18
摘要
In this work we identify low-level aspects of robot motion that can be exploited to create impressions of agency and lifelikeness. In two experiments, participants view split-screen videos of multiple robots set to music and rate the robots on their dance ability, lifelikeness, and entertainment value. The first experiment tests the impact of the correspondence (or lack thereof) of the robot's motion to the underlying rhythm of the music, and the effect of matching changes in the robot's movement to changes in the music, such as a phrase of vocals or drumming. This motivates a second experiment which more deeply explores the relationships of asynchrony and changes in motion repertoire to participants' perceptions of the lifelikeness of the robot's motion. Findings indicate that perceptions of the lifelikeness of the robot and the quality of the dance can be manipulated by simple changes, such as variation in the repertoire of motions, coordination of changes in behavior with events in the music, and the addition of flaws to the robot's synchrony with the music.
关键词
相关论文
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 等 20 位作者
2016