Title :
Robots with emotional intelligence
Author :
Picard, Rosalind W.
Author_Institution :
MIT Media Lab., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
This keynote talk will illustrate a basic set of skills of emotional intelligence, how they are important for robots and agents that interact with people, and how our research at MIT addresses part of the problem of giving robots such skills. One of the most important skills is the ability to perceive and understand expressions of emotion, which I will highlight by demonstrating new technologies developed to read joint facial-head movements in real-time and associate these with complex affective-cognitive states, and technologies to read paralinguistic vocal cues from speech. I will also show some non-traditional ways robots might sense and learn about human emotion, and ways they can respond to what they sense that can help or hurt people. I will discuss social and ethical issues these technologies raise. Finally, I will present some new possibilities for robots to both learn from people and help teach skills of emotional intelligence to people, especially to those with nonverbal learning impairments who often want to learn these skills, including many people with diagnoses of autism spectrum disorders such as Aspergers Syndrome.
Keywords :
behavioural sciences; computer aided instruction; educational robots; emotion recognition; ethical aspects; human-robot interaction; image motion analysis; intelligent robots; learning (artificial intelligence); medical disorders; speech processing; teaching; Aspergers Syndrome; MIT; affective-cognitive state; autism spectrum disorder; emotion expression; emotion perception; emotion understanding; ethical issue; facial-head movement; human emotion learning; human emotion sensing; nonverbal learning impairment; paralinguistic vocal cue; robot emotional intelligence; skills teaching; social issue; Artificial intelligence; Autism; Emotion recognition; Laboratories; Media; Robot sensing systems; Affective computing; autism; deception detection; emotion recognition; emotional intelligence; empathic technology; facial expression recognition; physiological sensing; prosody analysis; system;
Conference_Titel :
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2009 4th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
La Jolla, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-60558-404-1