DocumentCode :
2694247
Title :
A multi-disciplinary design process for affective robots: Case study of Survivor Buddy 2.0
Author :
Murphy, Robin ; Rice, Aaron ; Rashidi, Negar ; Henkel, Zachary ; Srinivasan, Vasant
Author_Institution :
Center for Robot-Assisted Search & Rescue, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
fYear :
2011
fDate :
9-13 May 2011
Firstpage :
701
Lastpage :
706
Abstract :
Designing and constructing affective robots on schedule and within costs is especially challenging because of the qualitative, artistic nature of affective expressions. Detailed affective design principles do not exist, forcing an iterative design process. This paper describes a three step design process created for the Survivor Buddy project that engages artists in the design process and allows animation to guide physical implementation. The process combines creative design of believable agents unconstrained by costs with traditional design decision matrices. The paper provides a case study comparing the resulting design of the Survivor Buddy 2.0 robot with the original (Survivor Buddy 1.0). The multi-disciplinary methodology produced a more pleasing and expressive robot that was 50% less expensive, 78% lighter, and up to 700% faster within the same amount of design time. This methodology is expected to contribute to reducing risk in designing cost effective affective robots and robots in general.
Keywords :
robots; Survivor Buddy 2.0 robot; cost effective affective robots; decision matrices; expressive robot; iterative design process; multidisciplinary design process; Animation; Computers; Couplings; Joints; Monitoring; Prototypes; Robots;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
ISSN :
1050-4729
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-386-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICRA.2011.5979977
Filename :
5979977
Link To Document :
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