Title :
Robot-specific social cues in emotional body language
Author :
Embgen, Stephanie ; Luber, Matthias ; Becker-Asano, Christian ; Ragni, Marco ; Evers, Vanessa ; Arras, Kai O.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Abstract :
Humans use very sophisticated ways of bodily emotion expression combining facial expressions, sound, gestures and full body posture. Like others, we want to apply these aspects of human communication to ease the interaction between robots and users. In doing so we believe there is a need to consider what abstraction of human social communicative behaviors is appropriate for robots. The study reported in this paper is a pilot study to not offer simulated emotion but to offer an abstracted robot version of emotion expressions and an evaluation to what extent users interpret these robot expressions as the intended emotional states. To this end, we present the mobile, mildly humanized robot Daryl, for which we created six motion sequences that combine human-like, animal-like, and robot-specific social cues. The results of a user study (N=29) show that despite the absence of facial expressions and articulated extremities, subjects´ interpretation of Daryl´s emotional states were congruent with the abstracted emotion display. These results demonstrate that abstract displays of emotion that combine human-like, animal-like, and robot-specific modalities could in fact be an alternative to complex facial expressions and will feed into ongoing work identifying robot-specific social cues.
Keywords :
emotion recognition; human-robot interaction; humanoid robots; intelligent robots; psychology; Daryl emotional state; abstracted emotion display; animal-like social cues; bodily emotion expression; body posture; facial expression; human communication; human social communicative behavior; human-like social cues; intended emotional states; mildly humanized robot; motion sequences; robot expression; robot-specific social cues; simulated emotion; Animals; Color; Ear; Emotion recognition; Humans; Light emitting diodes; Robots;
Conference_Titel :
RO-MAN, 2012 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Paris
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4604-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1944-9445
DOI :
10.1109/ROMAN.2012.6343883