A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots

As robots continue to enter people's spaces and environments, it will be increasingly important to have effective interfaces for interaction and communication. One such aspect of this communication is people's awareness of the robot's actions and state. We believe that using high-leve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Singh, Ashish
Other Authors: Young, James E. (Computer Science)
Published: Springer 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23435
id ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-23435
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-234352014-09-04T03:45:10Z A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots Singh, Ashish Young, James E. (Computer Science) Bunt, Andrea (Computer Science) Peng, Qingjin (Mechanical Engineering) Human-Robot Interaction Robotic Dog Tail Ambient Displays As robots continue to enter people's spaces and environments, it will be increasingly important to have effective interfaces for interaction and communication. One such aspect of this communication is people's awareness of the robot's actions and state. We believe that using high-level state representations, as a peripheral awareness channel, will help people to be aware of the robotic states in an easy to understand way. For example, when a robot is boxed in a small area, it can suggest a negative robot state (e.g., not willing to work in a small area as it cannot clean the entire room) by appearing unhappy to people. To investigate this, we built a robotic dog tail prototype and conducted a study to investigate how different tail motions (based on several motion parameters, e.g., speed) influence people’s perceptions of the robot. The results from this study formed design guidelines that Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) designers can leverage to convey robotic states. Further, we evaluated our overall approach and tested these guidelines by conducting a design workshop with interaction designers where we asked them to use the guidelines to design tail behaviors for various robotic states (e.g., looking for dirt) for robots working in different environments (e.g., domestic service). Results from this workshop helped in improving the confusing parts in our guidelines and making them easy to use by the designers. In conclusion, this thesis presents a set of solidified design guidelines that can be leveraged by HRI designers to convey the states of robots in a way that people can readily understand when and how to interact with them. 2014-04-10T16:49:14Z 2014-04-10T16:49:14Z 2013 2012 Singh, Ashish, and James E. Young. "A Dog Tail for Utility Robots: Exploring Affective Properties of Tail Movement." Human-Computer Interaction–INTERACT 2013. Springer, 2013. Singh, Ashish, and James E. Young. "Animal-Inspired Human-Robot Interaction: A Robotic Tail for Communicating State." Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE international conference on Human-Robot Interaction. ACM, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23435 Springer ACM
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Human-Robot Interaction
Robotic Dog Tail
Ambient Displays
spellingShingle Human-Robot Interaction
Robotic Dog Tail
Ambient Displays
Singh, Ashish
A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
description As robots continue to enter people's spaces and environments, it will be increasingly important to have effective interfaces for interaction and communication. One such aspect of this communication is people's awareness of the robot's actions and state. We believe that using high-level state representations, as a peripheral awareness channel, will help people to be aware of the robotic states in an easy to understand way. For example, when a robot is boxed in a small area, it can suggest a negative robot state (e.g., not willing to work in a small area as it cannot clean the entire room) by appearing unhappy to people. To investigate this, we built a robotic dog tail prototype and conducted a study to investigate how different tail motions (based on several motion parameters, e.g., speed) influence people’s perceptions of the robot. The results from this study formed design guidelines that Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) designers can leverage to convey robotic states. Further, we evaluated our overall approach and tested these guidelines by conducting a design workshop with interaction designers where we asked them to use the guidelines to design tail behaviors for various robotic states (e.g., looking for dirt) for robots working in different environments (e.g., domestic service). Results from this workshop helped in improving the confusing parts in our guidelines and making them easy to use by the designers. In conclusion, this thesis presents a set of solidified design guidelines that can be leveraged by HRI designers to convey the states of robots in a way that people can readily understand when and how to interact with them.
author2 Young, James E. (Computer Science)
author_facet Young, James E. (Computer Science)
Singh, Ashish
author Singh, Ashish
author_sort Singh, Ashish
title A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
title_short A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
title_full A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
title_fullStr A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
title_full_unstemmed A Dog Tail Interface for Communicating Affective States of Utility Robots
title_sort dog tail interface for communicating affective states of utility robots
publisher Springer
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23435
work_keys_str_mv AT singhashish adogtailinterfaceforcommunicatingaffectivestatesofutilityrobots
AT singhashish dogtailinterfaceforcommunicatingaffectivestatesofutilityrobots
_version_ 1716711367863435264