Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation

Robotic and other autonomous systems that need to operate in environments with people should respect social rules. One important aspect of this is personal space, which is the space surrounding a person. When two people are in a conversation, they position themselves such that a so-called shared int...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peter A. M. Ruijten, Raymond H. Cuijpers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Information
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/11/3/147
id doaj-330df573003347be9bae0f7549ba8f2c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-330df573003347be9bae0f7549ba8f2c2020-11-25T01:15:20ZengMDPI AGInformation2078-24892020-03-0111314710.3390/info11030147info11030147Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a ConversationPeter A. M. Ruijten0Raymond H. Cuijpers1Department of Industrial Engineering & Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology, 5612 AZ Eindhoven, The NetherlandsDepartment of Industrial Engineering & Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology, 5612 AZ Eindhoven, The NetherlandsRobotic and other autonomous systems that need to operate in environments with people should respect social rules. One important aspect of this is personal space, which is the space surrounding a person. When two people are in a conversation, they position themselves such that a so-called shared interaction space is created in the middle of them. The aim of the current research was to experimentally investigate the shape and size of this shared interaction space in different formations. In three experiments, we had a robot approaching two people who were having a conversation from 5 different directions, and those people indicated what would be a comfortable distance for the robot to stop. We expected that people would take the personal space of their conversation partner into account when stopping the robot. Findings of the three studies mostly confirm this expectation. Apart from some exceptions, people tend to stop the robot at a similar distance from their conversation partner as from themselves. If these findings are applied in the behavior of robotic and other autonomous systems, people would be more likely to trust and later accept robots in their physical space, ultimately creating natural social interactions between humans and robots.https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/11/3/147personal spaceshared interaction spacecomfortable distancerobot navigation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter A. M. Ruijten
Raymond H. Cuijpers
spellingShingle Peter A. M. Ruijten
Raymond H. Cuijpers
Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
Information
personal space
shared interaction space
comfortable distance
robot navigation
author_facet Peter A. M. Ruijten
Raymond H. Cuijpers
author_sort Peter A. M. Ruijten
title Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
title_short Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
title_full Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
title_fullStr Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
title_full_unstemmed Do Not Let the Robot Get too Close: Investigating the Shape and Size of Shared Interaction Space for Two People in a Conversation
title_sort do not let the robot get too close: investigating the shape and size of shared interaction space for two people in a conversation
publisher MDPI AG
series Information
issn 2078-2489
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Robotic and other autonomous systems that need to operate in environments with people should respect social rules. One important aspect of this is personal space, which is the space surrounding a person. When two people are in a conversation, they position themselves such that a so-called shared interaction space is created in the middle of them. The aim of the current research was to experimentally investigate the shape and size of this shared interaction space in different formations. In three experiments, we had a robot approaching two people who were having a conversation from 5 different directions, and those people indicated what would be a comfortable distance for the robot to stop. We expected that people would take the personal space of their conversation partner into account when stopping the robot. Findings of the three studies mostly confirm this expectation. Apart from some exceptions, people tend to stop the robot at a similar distance from their conversation partner as from themselves. If these findings are applied in the behavior of robotic and other autonomous systems, people would be more likely to trust and later accept robots in their physical space, ultimately creating natural social interactions between humans and robots.
topic personal space
shared interaction space
comfortable distance
robot navigation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/11/3/147
work_keys_str_mv AT peteramruijten donotlettherobotgettoocloseinvestigatingtheshapeandsizeofsharedinteractionspacefortwopeopleinaconversation
AT raymondhcuijpers donotlettherobotgettoocloseinvestigatingtheshapeandsizeofsharedinteractionspacefortwopeopleinaconversation
_version_ 1725153843562414080