Publication | Closed Access
The role of physical embodiment in human-robot interaction
278
Citations
17
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringSocially Assistive RobotMotor ControlPhysical EmbodimentSocial SciencesEmbodied AgentVirtual RealityPhysical BodiesHumanrobot CollaborationRobot LearningEmbodied RoboticsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesEmbodimentHuman Agent InteractionTask PerformanceSocial CognitionHuman-robot InteractionAutomationHuman-computer InteractionRobotics
Autonomous robots are agents with physical bodies that share our environment. In this work, we test the hypothesis that physical embodiment has a measurable effect on performance and perception of social interactions. Support of this hypothesis would suggest fundamental differences between virtual agents and robots from a social standpoint and have significant implications for human-robot interaction. We measure task performance and perception of a robot's social abilities in a structured but open-ended task based on the Towers of Hanoi puzzle. Our experiment compares aspects of embodiment by evaluating: (1) the difference between a physical robot and a simulated one; (2) the effect of physical presence through a co-located robot versus a remote tele-present robot. We present data from a pilot study with 12 subjects showing interesting differences in perception of remote physical robot's and simulated agent's attention to the task, and task enjoyment.
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