DocumentCode :
1638732
Title :
The inversion effect in HRI: Are robots perceived more like humans or objects?
Author :
Zlotowski, J. ; Bartneck, Christoph
Author_Institution :
HIT Lab. NZ, Univ. of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
fYear :
2013
Firstpage :
365
Lastpage :
372
Abstract :
The inversion effect describes a phenomenon in which certain types of images are harder to recognize when they are presented upside down compared to when they are shown upright. Images of human faces and bodies suffer from the inversion effect whereas images of objects do not. The effect may be caused by the configural processing of faces and body postures, which is dependent on the perception of spatial relations between different parts of the stimuli. We investigated if the inversion effect applies to images of robots in the hope of using it as a measurement tool for robot´s anthropomorphism. The results suggest that robots, similarly to humans, are subject to the inversion effect. Furthermore, there is a significant, but weak linear relationship between the recognition accuracy and perceived anthropomorphism. The small variance explained by the inversion effect renders this test inferior to the questionnaire based Godspeed Anthropomorphism Scale.
Keywords :
face recognition; human factors; human-robot interaction; robot vision; body postures; configural processing; human body image; human face image; image recognition; inversion effect; measurement tool; perceived anthropomorphism; questionnaire based Godspeed anthropomorphism scale; robot anthropomorphism; spatial relation perception; Accuracy; Anthropomorphism; Atmospheric measurements; Face recognition; Image recognition; Particle measurements; Robots; anthropomorphism; human-robot interaction; inversion effect; methodology;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2013 8th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Tokyo
ISSN :
2167-2121
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-3099-2
Electronic_ISBN :
2167-2121
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HRI.2013.6483611
Filename :
6483611
Link To Document :
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