Publication | Closed Access
A Simple Nod of the Head
34
Citations
34
References
2017
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringSocially Assistive RobotSimple NodAnatomyCommunicationMinimal Gaze MovementsVisual LanguageMinimal Robot MovementsSocial-gaze MovementsRobot LearningEmbodied RoboticsCognitive ScienceAssistive TechnologyHuman Agent InteractionHuman-robot InteractionDevelopmental RoboticsFacial AnimationEye TrackingPersonal RobotHuman-computer InteractionArtsRoboticsNonverbal Communication
In this note, we present minimal robot movements for robotic technology for children. Two types of minimal gaze movements were designed: social-gaze movements to communicate social engagement and deictic-gaze movements to communicate task-related referential information. In a two (social-gaze movements vs. none) by two (deictic-gaze movements vs. none) video-based study (n=72), we found that social-gaze movements significantly increased children's perception of animacy and likeability of the robot. Deictic-gaze and social-gaze movements significantly increased children's perception of helpfulness. Our findings show the compelling communicative power of social-gaze movements, and to a lesser extent deictic-gaze movements, and have implications for designers who want to achieve animacy, likeability and helpfulness with simple and easily implementable minimal robot movements. Our work contributes to human-robot interaction research and design by providing a first indication of the potential of minimal robot movements to communicate social engagement and helpful referential information to children.
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