Blinking behavior is an important part of human nonverbal communication. It signals the psychological state of the social partner. In this study, we implemented different blinking behaviors for a humanoid robot with pronounced physical eyes. The blinking patterns implemented were either statistical or based on human physiological data. We investigated in an online study the influence of the different behaviors on the perception of the robot by human users with the help of the Godspeed questionnaire. Our results showed that, in the condition with human-like blinking behavior, the robot was perceived as being more intelligent compared to not blinking or statistical blinking. As we will argue, this finding represents the starting point for the design of a ‘holistic’ social robotic behavior.

(2016). Physiologically inspired blinking behavior for a humanoid robot . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/215695

Physiologically inspired blinking behavior for a humanoid robot

Lehmann, Hagen;
2016-01-01

Abstract

Blinking behavior is an important part of human nonverbal communication. It signals the psychological state of the social partner. In this study, we implemented different blinking behaviors for a humanoid robot with pronounced physical eyes. The blinking patterns implemented were either statistical or based on human physiological data. We investigated in an online study the influence of the different behaviors on the perception of the robot by human users with the help of the Godspeed questionnaire. Our results showed that, in the condition with human-like blinking behavior, the robot was perceived as being more intelligent compared to not blinking or statistical blinking. As we will argue, this finding represents the starting point for the design of a ‘holistic’ social robotic behavior.
2016
Inglese
ICSR 2016: Social Robotics. International Conference on Social Robotics
Agah, Arvin; Cabibihan, John-John; Howard, Ayanna M.; Salichs, Miguel A.; He, Hongsheng;
978-3-319-47436-6
9979
83
93
online
Germany
Heidelberg
Springer Verlag AG
esperti anonimi
ICSR 2016: 8th International Conference on Social Robotics, Kansas City, USA, 1-3 November 2016
8th
Kansas City (USA)
1-3 November 2016
SoftBank Robotics
Springer
University of Kansas School of Engineering
internazionale
contributo
Settore M-PED/04 - Pedagogia Sperimentale
Godspeed questionnaire; Human-like blinking behavior; Humanoids robotics; iCub; Online study; Social robotics
indice consultabile alla pagina degli atti
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
4
Lehmann, Hagen; Roncone, Alessandro; Pattacini, Ugo; Metta, Giorgio
1.4 Contributi in atti di convegno - Contributions in conference proceedings::1.4.01 Contributi in atti di convegno - Conference presentations
reserved
Non definito
273
(2016). Physiologically inspired blinking behavior for a humanoid robot . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/215695
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