首页 /研究 /A role of multi-modal rhythms in physical interaction and cooperation
HRI

A role of multi-modal rhythms in physical interaction and cooperation

Kenta Yonekura, Chyon Hae Kim, Kazuhiro Nakadai, Hiroshi Tsujino, Shigeki Sugano

发表年份
2012
引用次数
3
访问权限
开放获取

摘要

Abstract As fundamental research for human-robot interaction, this paper addresses the rhythmic reference of a human while turning a rope with another human. We hypothyzed that when interpreting rhythm cues to make a rhythm reference, humans will use auditory and force rhythms more than visual ones. We examined 21-23 years old test subjects. We masked perception of each test subject using 3 kinds of masks, an eye-mask, headphones, and a force mask. The force mask is composed of a robot arm and a remote controller. These instruments allow a test subject to turn a rope without feeling force from the rope. In the first experiment, each test subject interacted with an operator that turned a rope with a constant rhythm. 8 experiments were conducted for each test subject that wore combinations of masks. We measured the angular velocity of force between a test subject/the operator and a rope. We calculated error between the angular velocities of the force directions, and validated the error. In the second experiment, two test subjects interacted with each other. 1.6 - 2.4 Hz auditory rhythm was presented from headphones so as to inform target turning frequency. Addition to the auditory rhythm, the test subjects wore eye-masks. The first experiment showed that visual rhythm has little influence on rope-turning cooperation between humans. The second experiment provided firmer evidence for the same hypothesis because humans neglected their visual rhythms.

关键词

RopeRhythmHeadphonesPerceptionPsychologyComputer scienceSimulationCommunicationAcousticsPhysics

相关论文

查看 HRI 分类全部论文