DocumentCode
1868681
Title
Interaction with a zoomorphic robot that exhibits canid mechanisms of behaviour
Author
Jones, Trevor ; Lawson, Shaun ; Mills, Daniel
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. & Inf., Univ. of Lincoln, Lincoln
fYear
2008
fDate
19-23 May 2008
Firstpage
2128
Lastpage
2133
Abstract
Despite parallels between the cooperative use of domestic dogs in human society today, the predicted similar deployment of robots in the future, and the plethora of superficially dog-like robotic entertainment devices, very little effort has been directed at exploiting any understanding of social cognition between dogs and humans when designing interactive robotic systems. This paper describes an experiment in which we gave interactive robots zoomorphic appearances and dog-like behavioural properties. We analysed human reactions to robots exhibiting differing levels of zoomorphism and dog-like behaviour during an interaction task; we were particularly interested to determine whether behaviour and/or appearance that mimicked that of dogs facilitated increased satisfaction in robot performance and a willingness to persevere with a robot that made mistakes. Our findings show that neither the appearance or behaviour of a robot had an impact on the participants´ rating of robot performance whilst there was also no significant difference in the self-reported categories of frustration, excitement and desire to persist with an interaction. However, our findings suggest that differences in individual preferences are revealed when people are asked to interact with robots that exhibit dog-like behaviours and other zoomorphic characteristics and that further research is required in order to better understand these differences.
Keywords
cognition; control system synthesis; interactive systems; robots; behaviour canid mechanisms; dog-like behavioural properties; dog-like robotic entertainment devices; human reaction analysis; interactive robotic system design; social cognition; zoomorphic robot interaction; Anthropomorphism; Cognitive robotics; Dogs; Human robot interaction; Medical robotics; Parallel robots; Positron emission tomography; Robotics and automation; Service robots; USA Councils;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2008. ICRA 2008. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Pasadena, CA
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1646-2
Electronic_ISBN
1050-4729
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2008.4543521
Filename
4543521
Link To Document