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4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-3 1 A Survey of Socially Interactive Robots Terrance Fong, Illah Nourbakhsh, Kerstin Dautenhahn Presentation by Dan Hartmann.

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Presentation on theme: "4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-3 1 A Survey of Socially Interactive Robots Terrance Fong, Illah Nourbakhsh, Kerstin Dautenhahn Presentation by Dan Hartmann."— Presentation transcript:

1 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-3 1 A Survey of Socially Interactive Robots Terrance Fong, Illah Nourbakhsh, Kerstin Dautenhahn Presentation by Dan Hartmann

2 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-32 Context - History The first work in social robotics involved stigmergy as a model for behavior in insect colonies Stigmergy was described to explain how social insect societies produce complex behavior patterns, from individuals performing simple ones.

3 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-33 Context - Societies Insect societies are anonymous, homogenous groups. Many animals form individual societies, where each member forms relationships and social networks

4 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-34 Context – Breazeal’s Four Classes of Social Robots Socially Evocative Relies on the human tendency to anthropomorphize Social Interface Provides a natural interface by employing human-like social cues Socially Receptive Socially Passive but benefits from interaction e.g. learning from demonstration Sociable Pro-actively engages with humans to satisfy internal social aims

5 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-35 Context – Three More Suggested Classes Socially Intelligent Show aspects of human style social intelligence, based on deep models of human cognition. Socially Situated Surrounded by a social environment, they must be able to distinguish between social agents and other objects. Socially Embedded Physically connected to a social environment requiring at least rudimentary social concepts, such as taking turns.

6 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-36 Context – Paper’s Scope This paper focuses on "peer-to-peer" human- robot interaction… The underlying assumption is that humans prefer to interact with machines in the same way that they interact with other people Robots with human social characteristics including:

7 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-37 Methodology – Design Issues Natural human-robot interaction manifest believable behavior, establish appropriate social expectations Real-time performance Must operate at human interaction rates Readable social cues Must send signals to the human to provide social feedback.

8 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-38 Methodology – Embodiment “That which establishes a basis for structural coupling by creating the potential for mutual perturbation between system and environment" - Authors’ definition

9 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-39 Methodology - Embodiment Morphology Appearance biases interaction (e.g. a robot dog will be treated differently than an anthropomorphic robot) Design Considerations Needs enough humanness for user comfort Needs enough robot-ness to prevent false expectations of the robot's capabilities

10 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-310 Methodology - Embodiment Anthropomorphic Many argue that to interact socially with people a robot should resemble a human Caricatured Realism is not necessarily needed for believability. Functional The embodiment should reflect the tasks it must perform. Zoomorphic Most common are "pet" type robots Human-creature relationships are simpler than human-human relationships Easier to avoid the "uncanny valley“ in previous slide

11 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-311 Methodology – Human-Oriented Perception To interact with humans in the real world, social robots must perceive the world the same way that humans do In particular, they must be able to track human features and interpret human communication Similar perception may require similar sensing

12 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-312 Methodology – Human-Oriented Perception Each of these tasks is mentioned and references papers for in depth work. People Tracking Speech Recognition Gesture Recognition Facial Perception

13 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-313 Topics That I Am Skipping for Time and Relevance Dialogue Personality Emotion User Modeling Socially Situated Learning Intentionality

14 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-314 Discussion – Attitudes Towards Robots Khan describes a survey to investigate people’s attitudes towards intelligent service robots. Two significant findings were: A robot with machine-like appearance, serious personality, and round shape is preferred Verbal communication using a human-like voice is highly desired.

15 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-315 Discussion – Field Studies Scheeff et al. conducted two studies to observe how a range of people interact with a creature-like social robot. Children were observed to be more engaged than adults. A friendly robot personality was reported to have prompted qualitatively better interactionthan an angry personality.

16 4/12/2007dhartman, CS296-316 Discussion – One Last Point for Perspective Paraphrasing Wood,the authors say: “Humans and robots must be able to coordinate their actions so that they interact productively with each other. It is not appropriate (or even necessary) to make the robot as socially competent as possible. Rather, it is more important that the robot be compatible with the human’s needs, that it matches application requirements; that it be understandable and believable, and that it provide the interactional support the human expects.


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