DocumentCode
565461
Title
How quickly should communication robots respond?
Author
Shiwa, T. ; Kanda, Takefumi ; Imai, Masayoshi ; Ishiguro, Hiroshi ; Hagita, Norihiro
Author_Institution
ATR Intell. Robot. & Commun. Lab., Keihana Science City, Japan
fYear
2008
fDate
12-15 March 2008
Firstpage
153
Lastpage
160
Abstract
This paper reports a study about system response time (SRT) in communication robots that utilize human-like social features, such as anthropomorphic appearance and conversation in natural language. Our research purpose established a design guideline for SRT in communication robots. The first experiment observed user preferences toward different SRTs in interaction with a robot. In other existing user interfaces, faster response is usually preferred. In contrast, our experimental result indicated that user preference for SRT in a communication robot is highest at one second, and user preference ratings level off at two seconds. However, a robot cannot always respond in such a short time as one or two seconds. Thus, the important question is “What should a robot do if it cannot respond quickly enough?” The second experiment tested the effectiveness of a conversational filler: behavior to notify listeners that the robot is going to respond. In Japanese “etto” is used to buy time to think and resembles “well...” and “uh...” In English. We used the same strategy in a communication robot to shadow system response time. Our results indicated that using a conversational filler by the robot moderated the user´s impression toward a long SRT.
Keywords
control engineering computing; human-robot interaction; user interfaces; anthropomorphic appearance; communication robots; conversational filler; design guideline; human-like social feature; natural language; system response time; user interface; user preference rating level; Educational institutions; Graphical user interfaces; Guidelines; Humans; Robots; Time factors; Timing; Communication robots; Conversational filler; System Response Time;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2008 3rd ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Amsterdam
ISSN
2167-2121
Print_ISBN
978-1-60558-017-3
Type
conf
Filename
6249428
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