Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks

Humanoid robot avatars are a potential new telecommunication tool, whereby a user is remotely represented by a robot that replicates their arm, head, and possible face movements. They have been shown to have a number of benefits over more traditional media such as phones or video calls. However, usi...

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Main Authors: Paul Adam Bremner, Oya Celiktutan, Hatice Gunes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Robotics and AI
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2017.00016/full
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spelling doaj-5177cc416af54dd580df9a720f0754bd2020-11-24T22:13:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Robotics and AI2296-91442017-05-01410.3389/frobt.2017.00016249980Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic TasksPaul Adam Bremner0Oya Celiktutan1Hatice Gunes2Bristol Robotics Laboratory, University of West England, Bristol, UKComputer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKComputer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UKHumanoid robot avatars are a potential new telecommunication tool, whereby a user is remotely represented by a robot that replicates their arm, head, and possible face movements. They have been shown to have a number of benefits over more traditional media such as phones or video calls. However, using a teleoperated humanoid as a communication medium inherently changes the appearance of the operator, and appearance-based stereotypes are used in interpersonal judgments (whether consciously or unconsciously). One such judgment that plays a key role in how people interact is personality. Hence, we have been motivated to investigate if and how using a robot avatar alters the perceived personality of teleoperators. To do so, we carried out two studies where participants performed 3 communication tasks, solo in study one and dyadic in study two, and were recorded on video both with and without robot mediation. Judges recruited using online crowdsourcing services then made personality judgments of the participants in the video clips. We observed that judges were able to make internally consistent trait judgments in both communication conditions. However, judge agreement was affected by robot mediation, although which traits were affected was highly task dependent. Our most important finding was that in dyadic tasks personality trait perception was shifted to incorporate cues relating to the robot’s appearance when it was used to communicate. Our findings have important implications for telepresence robot design and personality expression in autonomous robots.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2017.00016/fulltelepresenceBig Five personality traitspersonality perception
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Adam Bremner
Oya Celiktutan
Hatice Gunes
spellingShingle Paul Adam Bremner
Oya Celiktutan
Hatice Gunes
Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
Frontiers in Robotics and AI
telepresence
Big Five personality traits
personality perception
author_facet Paul Adam Bremner
Oya Celiktutan
Hatice Gunes
author_sort Paul Adam Bremner
title Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
title_short Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
title_full Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
title_fullStr Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
title_full_unstemmed Personality Perception of Robot Avatar Teleoperators in Solo and Dyadic Tasks
title_sort personality perception of robot avatar teleoperators in solo and dyadic tasks
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Robotics and AI
issn 2296-9144
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Humanoid robot avatars are a potential new telecommunication tool, whereby a user is remotely represented by a robot that replicates their arm, head, and possible face movements. They have been shown to have a number of benefits over more traditional media such as phones or video calls. However, using a teleoperated humanoid as a communication medium inherently changes the appearance of the operator, and appearance-based stereotypes are used in interpersonal judgments (whether consciously or unconsciously). One such judgment that plays a key role in how people interact is personality. Hence, we have been motivated to investigate if and how using a robot avatar alters the perceived personality of teleoperators. To do so, we carried out two studies where participants performed 3 communication tasks, solo in study one and dyadic in study two, and were recorded on video both with and without robot mediation. Judges recruited using online crowdsourcing services then made personality judgments of the participants in the video clips. We observed that judges were able to make internally consistent trait judgments in both communication conditions. However, judge agreement was affected by robot mediation, although which traits were affected was highly task dependent. Our most important finding was that in dyadic tasks personality trait perception was shifted to incorporate cues relating to the robot’s appearance when it was used to communicate. Our findings have important implications for telepresence robot design and personality expression in autonomous robots.
topic telepresence
Big Five personality traits
personality perception
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2017.00016/full
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