Title :
Behaviour delay and robot expressiveness in child-robot interactions: A user study on interaction kinesics
Author :
Robins, Ben ; Dautenhahn, Kerstin ; Boekhorst, René Te ; Nehaniv, Chrystopher L.
Author_Institution :
Adaptive Syst. Res. Group, Univ. of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK
Abstract :
This paper presents results of a novel study on interaction kinesics where 18 children interacted with a humanoid child-sized robot called KASPAR. Based on findings in psychology and social sciences we propose the temporal behaviour matching hypothesis which predicts that children will adapt to and match the robot´s temporal behaviour. Each child took part in six experimental trials involving two games in which the dynamics of interactions played a key part: a body expression imitation game, where the robot imitated expressions demonstrated by the children, and a drumming game where the robot mirrored the children´s drumming. In both games KASPAR responded either with or without a delay. Additionally, in the drumming game, KASPAR responded with or without exhibiting facial/gestural expressions. Individual case studies as well as statistical analysis of the complete sample are presented. Results show that a delay of the robot´s drumming response lead to larger pauses (with and without robot nonverbal gestural expressions) and longer drumming durations (with nonverbal gestural expressions only). In the imitation game, the robot´s delay lead to longer imitation eliciting behaviour with longer pauses for the children, but systematic individual differences are observed in regards to the effects on the children´s pauses. Results are generally consistent with the temporal behaviour matching hypothesis, i.e. children adapted the timing of their behaviour, e.g. by mirroring to the robot´s temporal behaviour.
Keywords :
face recognition; gesture recognition; human-robot interaction; humanoid robots; interactive systems; psychology; social sciences; statistical analysis; KASPAR; behaviour delay; child-robot interactions; facial/gestural expressions; humanoid child-sized robot; interaction kinesics; psychology; robot expressiveness; social sciences; statistical analysis; temporal behaviour matching hypothesis; Delay; Face; Games; Humans; Robot kinematics; human-robot interaction; humanoid; interaction kinesics;
Conference_Titel :
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2008 3rd ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Amsterdam
Print_ISBN :
978-1-60558-017-3