English

Public speech recognition transcripts as a configuring parameter

Human-Computer Interaction 2025-04-08 v1

Abstract

Displaying a written transcript of what a human said (i.e. producing an "automatic speech recognition transcript") is a common feature for smartphone vocal assistants: the utterance produced by a human speaker (e.g. a question) is displayed on the screen while it is being verbally responded to by the vocal assistant. Although very rarely, this feature also exists on some "social" robots which transcribe human interactants' speech on a screen or a tablet. We argue that this informational configuration is pragmatically consequential on the interaction, both for human participants and for the embodied conversational agent. Based on a corpus of co-present interactions with a humanoid robot, we attempt to show that this transcript is a contextual feature which can heavily impact the actions ascribed by humans to the robot: that is, the way in which humans respond to the robot's behavior as constituting a specific type of action (rather than another) and as constituting an adequate response to their own previous turn.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2504.04488,
  title  = {Public speech recognition transcripts as a configuring parameter},
  author = {Damien Rudaz and Christian Licoppe},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.04488},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

Presented at MP-COSIN workshop, IEEE RO-MAN 2023, Busan

R2 v1 2026-06-28T22:48:34.957Z