DocumentCode
565632
Title
How robotic products become social products: An ethnographic study of cleaning in the home
Author
Forlizzi, Jodi
Author_Institution
HCII & Sch. of Design, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2007
fDate
9-11 March 2007
Firstpage
129
Lastpage
136
Abstract
Robots that work with people foster social relationships between people and systems. The home is an interesting place to study the adoption and use of these systems. The home provides challenges from both technical and interaction perspectives. In addition, the home is a seat for many specialized human behaviors and needs, and has a long history of what is collected and used to functionally, aesthetically, and symbolically fit the home. To understand the social impact of robotic technologies, this paper presents an ethnographic study of consumer robots in the home. Six families´ experience of floor cleaning after receiving a new vacuum (a Roomba robotic vacuum or the Flair, a handheld upright) was studied. While the Flair had little impact, the Roomba changed people, cleaning activities, and other product use. In addition, people described the Roomba in aesthetic and social terms. The results of this study, while initial, generate implications for how robots should be designed for the home.
Keywords
cleaning; human-robot interaction; service robots; Flair; Roomba; aesthetic terms; consumer robots; ethnographic study; floor cleaning; home cleaning; human behaviors; robotic products; robotic technologies; social products; social relationships; social terms; Abstracts; Robots; Vacuum technology; Ethnography; interaction design; robotic products; robots;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2007 2nd ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Arlington, VA
ISSN
2167-2121
Print_ISBN
978-1-59593-617-2
Type
conf
Filename
6251679
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