Publication | Open Access
Living with Robots: Investigating the Habituation Effect in Participants' Preferences During a Longitudinal Human-Robot Interaction Study
140
Citations
25
References
2007
Year
Unknown Venue
Behavioral Decision MakingSocially Assistive RobotAutonomySocial SciencesPsychologyHabituation EffectHabituation EffectsHumanrobot CollaborationEmbodied RoboticsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceHuman Agent InteractionExperimental PsychologyHuman-robot InteractionSocial CognitionSocial BehaviorRobot AutonomyPersonal RobotRobotics
This paper presents and discusses a longitudinal study which investigated habituation effects between humans and robots over a period of five weeks. Participants' preferences for the robot's approach distance with respect to its approach direction and appearance were investigated in a variety of domestic scenarios. These human-robot interaction (HRI) scenarios were also designed to explore the notions of autonomy and control. The results of this study show that participants' preferences change over time as the participants habituate to the robot. This trend was significant in terms of the robot's appearance and approach direction. Also, it seems to indicate that participants who are accustomed to the robot prefer to be more `in control' of the situation - in that they appreciated reduced robot autonomy in case of unexpected events.
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