How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language
Human-robot interaction in social robotics applications could be greatly enhanced by robotic behaviors that incorporate emotional body language. Using as our starting point a set of pre-designed, emotion conveying animations that have been created by professional animators for the Pepper robot, we s...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0012 |
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doaj-ff0d4962a16648bf8d70f02cb617fbad2021-10-02T19:25:52ZengDe GruyterPaladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics2081-48362018-07-019116818210.1515/pjbr-2018-0012pjbr-2018-0012How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body languageMarmpena Mina0Lim Angelica1Dahl Torbjørn S.2Centre for Robotics and Neural Systems, University of Plymouth, UK, SoftBank Robotics Europe, Paris, FranceSchool of Computing Science, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, CanadaCentre for Robotics and Neural Systems, School of Computing, Electronics and Mathematics, University ofPlymouth, UKHuman-robot interaction in social robotics applications could be greatly enhanced by robotic behaviors that incorporate emotional body language. Using as our starting point a set of pre-designed, emotion conveying animations that have been created by professional animators for the Pepper robot, we seek to explore how humans perceive their affect content, and to increase their usability by annotating them with reliable labels of valence and arousal, in a continuous interval space. We conducted an experiment with 20 participants who were presented with the animations and rated them in the two-dimensional affect space. An inter-rater reliability analysis was applied to support the aggregation of the ratings for deriving the final labels. The set of emotional body language animations with the labels of valence and arousal is available and can potentially be useful to other researchers as a ground truth for behavioral experiments on robotic expression of emotion, or for the automatic selection of robotic emotional behaviors with respect to valence and arousal. To further utilize the data we collected, we analyzed it with an exploratory approach and we present some interesting trends with regard to the human perception of Pepper’s emotional body language, that might be worth further investigation.https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0012social robotshuman robot interactiondimensional affectrobot emotion expression |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Marmpena Mina Lim Angelica Dahl Torbjørn S. |
spellingShingle |
Marmpena Mina Lim Angelica Dahl Torbjørn S. How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics social robots human robot interaction dimensional affect robot emotion expression |
author_facet |
Marmpena Mina Lim Angelica Dahl Torbjørn S. |
author_sort |
Marmpena Mina |
title |
How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
title_short |
How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
title_full |
How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
title_fullStr |
How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
title_full_unstemmed |
How does the robot feel? Perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
title_sort |
how does the robot feel? perception of valence and arousal in emotional body language |
publisher |
De Gruyter |
series |
Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics |
issn |
2081-4836 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
Human-robot interaction in social robotics applications could be greatly enhanced by robotic behaviors that incorporate emotional body language. Using as our starting point a set of pre-designed, emotion conveying animations that have been created by professional animators for the Pepper robot, we seek to explore how humans perceive their affect content, and to increase their usability by annotating them with reliable labels of valence and arousal, in a continuous interval space. We conducted an experiment with 20 participants who were presented with the animations and rated them in the two-dimensional affect space. An inter-rater reliability analysis was applied to support the aggregation of the ratings for deriving the final labels. The set of emotional body language animations with the labels of valence and arousal is available and can potentially be useful to other researchers as a ground truth for behavioral experiments on robotic expression of emotion, or for the automatic selection of robotic emotional behaviors with respect to valence and arousal. To further utilize the data we collected, we analyzed it with an exploratory approach and we present some interesting trends with regard to the human perception of Pepper’s emotional body language, that might be worth further investigation. |
topic |
social robots human robot interaction dimensional affect robot emotion expression |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0012 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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