Title :
Towards socially adaptive robots: A novel method for real time recognition of human-robot interaction styles
Author :
François, Dorothee ; Polani, Daniel ; Dautenhahn, Kerstin
Author_Institution :
Adaptive Syst. Res. Group, Univ. of Hertfordshire, Hatfield
Abstract :
Automatically detecting different styles of play in human-robot interaction is a key challenge towards adaptive robots, i.e. robots that are able to regulate the interactions and adapt to different interaction styles of the robot users. In this paper we present a novel algorithm for pattern recognition in human-robot interaction, the cascaded information bottleneck method. We apply it to real-time autonomous recognition of human-robot interaction styles. This method uses an information theoretic approach and enables to progressively extract relevant information from time series. It relies on a cascade of bottlenecks, the bottlenecks being trained one after the other according to the existing agglomerative information bottleneck algorithm. We show that a structure for the bottleneck states along the cascade emerges and we introduce a measure to extrapolate unseen data. We apply this method to real-time recognition of human-robot interaction styles by a robot in a detailed case study. The algorithm has been implemented for real interactions between humans and a real robot. We demonstrate that the algorithm, which is designed to operate real time, is capable of classifying interaction styles, with a good accuracy and a very acceptable delay. Our future work will evaluate this method in scenarios on robot-assisted therapy for children with autism.
Keywords :
extrapolation; human-robot interaction; medical robotics; pattern recognition; robot vision; service robots; time series; agglomerative information bottleneck algorithm; autism; cascaded information bottleneck method; human-robot interaction styles; information theoretic approach; pattern recognition; real-time autonomous recognition; robot-assisted therapy; socially adaptive robots; time series; Autism; Cognitive robotics; Human robot interaction; Humanoid robots; Information analysis; Pattern recognition; Rehabilitation robotics; Robot sensing systems; Robotics and automation; Time series analysis; Socially interactive robots; human-robot interaction; pattern recognition; robot-assisted play; socially adaptive robots;
Conference_Titel :
Humanoid Robots, 2008. Humanoids 2008. 8th IEEE-RAS International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Daejeon
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2821-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2822-9
DOI :
10.1109/ICHR.2008.4756004