DocumentCode :
919197
Title :
Affective State Estimation for Human–Robot Interaction
Author :
Kulic, Dana ; Croft, Elizabeth A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mechano-Inf., Tokyo Univ., Tokyo, Japan
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
991
Lastpage :
1000
Abstract :
In order for humans and robots to interact in an effective and intuitive manner, robots must obtain information about the human affective state in response to the robot\´s actions. This secondary mode of interactive communication is hypothesized to permit a more natural collaboration, similar to the "body language" interaction between two cooperating humans. This paper describes the implementation and validation of a hidden Markov model (HMM) for estimating human affective state in real time, using robot motions as the stimulus. Inputs to the system are physiological signals such as heart rate, perspiration rate, and facial muscle contraction. Affective state was estimated using a two- dimensional valence-arousal representation. A robot manipulator was used to generate motions expected during human-robot interaction, and human subjects were asked to report their response to these motions. The human physiological response was also measured. Robot motions were generated using both a nominal potential field planner and a recently reported safe motion planner that minimizes the potential collision forces along the path. The robot motions were tested with 36 subjects. This data was used to train and validate the HMM model. The results of the HMM affective estimation are also compared to a previously implemented fuzzy inference engine.
Keywords :
hidden Markov models; man-machine systems; manipulators; motion control; path planning; HMM affective estimation; hidden Markov model; human physiological response; human-robot interaction; interactive communication; motion planner; robot manipulator; two-dimensional valence-arousal representation; Collaboration; Facial muscles; Heart rate; Hidden Markov models; Human robot interaction; Manipulators; Motion estimation; Robot motion; State estimation; Testing; Affective state estimation; human–robot interaction; physiological signals;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1552-3098
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TRO.2007.904899
Filename :
4339537
Link To Document :
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