This paper investigates users' preferred interaction modalities when playing an imitation game with KASPAR, a small child-sized humanoid robot. The study involved 16 adult participants teaching the robot to mime a nursery rhyme via one of three interaction modalities in a real-time Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) experiment: voice, guiding touch and visual demonstration. The findings suggest that the users appeared to have no preference in terms of human effort for completing the task. However, there was a significant difference in human enjoyment preferences of input modality and a marginal difference in the robot's perceived ability to imitate.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1606.03992,
title = {What Communication Modalities Do Users Prefer in Real Time HRI?},
author = {Ori Novanda and Maha Salem and Joe Saunders and Michael L. Walters and Kerstin Dautenhahn},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.03992},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
5th International Symposium on New Frontiers in Human-Robot Interaction 2016 (arXiv:1602.05456)