DocumentCode
1638332
Title
How a robot should give advice
Author
Torrey, C. ; Fussell, S.R. ; Kiesler, Sara
Author_Institution
Adobe Syst., San Francisco, CA, USA
fYear
2013
Firstpage
275
Lastpage
282
Abstract
With advances in robotics, robots can give advice and help using natural language. The field of HRI, however, has not yet developed a communication strategy for giving advice effectively. Drawing on literature in politeness and informal speech, we propose options for a robot´s help-giving speech-using hedges or discourse markers, both of which can mitigate the commanding tone implied in direct statements of advice. To test these options, we experimentally compared two help-giving strategies depicted in videos of human and robot helpers. We found that when robot and human helpers used a hedge or discourse markers, they seemed more considerate and likeable, and less controlling. The robot that used discourse markers had even more impact than the human helper. The findings suggest that communication strategies derived from speech used when people help each other in natural settings can be effective for planning the help dialogues of robotic assistants.
Keywords
control engineering computing; natural language processing; robots; HRI field; communication strategy; informal speech; natural language; natural settings; robotic assistants; Educational robots; Force; Pragmatics; Robot sensing systems; Speech; Videos; Communication; assistive robots; dialogue; human-robot interaction; mixed-method; politeness; social robot;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2013 8th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Tokyo
ISSN
2167-2121
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-3099-2
Electronic_ISBN
2167-2121
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HRI.2013.6483599
Filename
6483599
Link To Document