• DocumentCode
    2581927
  • Title

    Conversational gestures in human-robot interaction

  • Author

    Bremner, Paul ; Pipe, Anthony ; Melhuish, Chris ; Fraser, Mike ; Subramanian, Sriram

  • Author_Institution
    Bristol Robot. Lab., Bristol, UK
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    11-14 Oct. 2009
  • Firstpage
    1645
  • Lastpage
    1649
  • Abstract
    The human sciences have demonstrated that gesture is a critical element of human communication. While existing graphical solutions are appropriate for virtual agents, solving arm trajectories for physically embodied robots requires that we consider the challenges of robot dynamics within a realtime gesture framework. We explore and evaluate a low computational-cost gesture production algorithm that can generate adequate gesture trajectories in a humanoid torso, as judged by participants in Human-Robot gesturing studies presented in this paper. Our approach produces a constrained inverse-kinematic solution for the start and end points, and generates appropriate wrist angles. Gesture time is used to calculate the joint accelerations to give a smooth, direct hand movement. Selecting open hand gestures as an example gesture sub-domain, we implement our controller on BERTI, a bespoke upper-torso humanoid robot (Fig. 2). A qualitative pilot study highlights gesture features salient to users: gesture shape, timing, naturalness and smoothness. A controlled experimental study then demonstrates that, by these metrics, our algorithm performs well; despite some dissimilarities with users´ own gestures. We establish some salient points of robot gestures based on these studies.
  • Keywords
    gesture recognition; human-robot interaction; humanoid robots; motion control; robot dynamics; BERTI; arm trajectories; bespoke upper-torso humanoid robot; constrained inverse-kinematic solution; conversational gestures; gesture features; gesture trajectories; human-robot interaction; humanoid torso; low computational-cost gesture production algorithm; physically embodied robots; robot dynamics; virtual agents; Anthropomorphism; Humanoid robots; Humans; Job production systems; Kinematics; Libraries; Motion analysis; Speech; Torso; Wrist; Conversational Gesture; Human-Robot Interaction; Low-Cost Motion;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 2009. SMC 2009. IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    San Antonio, TX
  • ISSN
    1062-922X
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2793-2
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1062-922X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICSMC.2009.5346903
  • Filename
    5346903