A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses

In designing and evaluating human-robot interactions and interfaces, researchers often use simulated robots because of the high cost of physical robots and time required to program them. However, it is important to consider how interaction with a simulated robot differs from a real robot; that is, d...

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Main Author: Seo, Stela
Other Authors: Young, James E. (Computer Science)
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30248
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-302482015-05-21T03:50:57Z A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses Seo, Stela Young, James E. (Computer Science) Hemmati, Hadi (Computer Science) Woolford, Andrew (Sociology) human-robot interaction empathy In designing and evaluating human-robot interactions and interfaces, researchers often use simulated robots because of the high cost of physical robots and time required to program them. However, it is important to consider how interaction with a simulated robot differs from a real robot; that is, do simulated robots provide authentic interaction? We contribute to a growing body of work that explores this question and maps out simulated-versus-real differences, by explicitly investigating empathy: how people empathize with a physical or simulated robot when something bad happens to it. Empathy is particularly relevant to social human-robot interaction (HRI) and is integral to, e.g., companion and care robots. To explore our question, we develop a convincing HRI scenario that induces people’s empathy toward a robot, and explore psychology work for an empathy-measuring instrument. To formally evaluate our scenario and the empathy-measuring instrument in HRI scenario, we conduct a comparative user study: in one condition, participants have the scenario which induces empathy, and for the other condition, we remove any empathy inducing activities of the robot. With the validated scenario and empathy measuring instrument, we conduct another user study to explore the difference between a real and a simulated robot in terms of people’s empathic response. Our results suggest that people empathize more with a physical robot than a simulated one, a finding that has important implications on the generalizability and applicability of simulated HRI work. As part of our exploration, we additionally present an original and reproducible HRI experimental design to induce empathy toward robots, and experimentally validated an empathy-measuring instrument from psychology for use with HRI. 2015-02-03T16:05:11Z 2015-02-03T16:05:11Z 2015-02-03 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30248
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic human-robot interaction
empathy
spellingShingle human-robot interaction
empathy
Seo, Stela
A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
description In designing and evaluating human-robot interactions and interfaces, researchers often use simulated robots because of the high cost of physical robots and time required to program them. However, it is important to consider how interaction with a simulated robot differs from a real robot; that is, do simulated robots provide authentic interaction? We contribute to a growing body of work that explores this question and maps out simulated-versus-real differences, by explicitly investigating empathy: how people empathize with a physical or simulated robot when something bad happens to it. Empathy is particularly relevant to social human-robot interaction (HRI) and is integral to, e.g., companion and care robots. To explore our question, we develop a convincing HRI scenario that induces people’s empathy toward a robot, and explore psychology work for an empathy-measuring instrument. To formally evaluate our scenario and the empathy-measuring instrument in HRI scenario, we conduct a comparative user study: in one condition, participants have the scenario which induces empathy, and for the other condition, we remove any empathy inducing activities of the robot. With the validated scenario and empathy measuring instrument, we conduct another user study to explore the difference between a real and a simulated robot in terms of people’s empathic response. Our results suggest that people empathize more with a physical robot than a simulated one, a finding that has important implications on the generalizability and applicability of simulated HRI work. As part of our exploration, we additionally present an original and reproducible HRI experimental design to induce empathy toward robots, and experimentally validated an empathy-measuring instrument from psychology for use with HRI.
author2 Young, James E. (Computer Science)
author_facet Young, James E. (Computer Science)
Seo, Stela
author Seo, Stela
author_sort Seo, Stela
title A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
title_short A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
title_full A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
title_fullStr A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
title_full_unstemmed A simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
title_sort simulated robot versus a real robot: an exploration of how robot embodiment impacts people's empathic responses
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/30248
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