DocumentCode
565783
Title
Emotion induction during human-robot interaction
Author
Wendt, Cornelia ; Popp, Michael ; Faerber, Berthold
Author_Institution
Inst. fuer Arbeitswissenschaft, Univ. der Bundeswehr, Neubiberg, Germany
fYear
2009
fDate
11-13 March 2009
Firstpage
213
Lastpage
213
Abstract
Summary form only given. The aim of the presented study was to measure physiological correlates of emotions that are of particular interest in the field of human-robot interaction (HRI). Therefore, we did not focus on self-induced basic emotions but rather evoked states that might occur naturally in this context. Our video shows how such states (namely stress, boredom, surprise, and perplexity) were elicited during a joint construction task with an industrial robot (see figure 1). Participants were asked to build different LEGO objects, while the robot arm was passing the bricks with predetermined velocity. States of stress and boredom were generated by varying the handover interval from 3 seconds (stress) to 5 seconds (normal working condition) up to 35 seconds (boredom). Surprise was induced by passing an unexpected component. At the end of the experiment, we additionally wanted to know how people react if the robot seems to tease them by repeatedly changing the handover position. This experiment was realized by the support of researchers from the MMK and the IWB of the Technical University Munich who provided the technical facilities and know-how. The underlying project is supported within the DFG excellence initiative research cluster “Cognition for Technical Systems - CoTeSys”, see also www.cotesys.org.
Keywords
emotion recognition; human-robot interaction; industrial manipulators; velocity control; HRI; LEGO object; Technical University Munich; boredom state; emotion induction; evoked state; handover interval; human-robot interaction; industrial robot; joint construction task; perplexity state; robot arm; robot velocity; self-induced basic emotion; stress state; surprise state; Abstracts; Human factors; Joints; Physiology; Service robots; Stress; Human-robot interaction; emotion recognition; joint construction; stress induction;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2009 4th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
La Jolla, CA
ISSN
2167-2121
Print_ISBN
978-1-60558-404-1
Type
conf
Filename
6256029
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