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ROMAN
2015
IEEE

Dynamics of social positioning patterns in group-robot interactions

8 years 8 months ago
Dynamics of social positioning patterns in group-robot interactions
— When a mobile robot interacts with a group of people, it has to consider its position and orientation. We introduce a novel study aimed at generating hypotheses on suitable behavior for such social positioning, explicitly focusing on interaction with small groups of users and allowing for the temporal and social dynamics inherent in most interactions. In particular, the interactions we look at are approach, converse and retreat. In this study, groups of three participants and a telepresence robot (controlled remotely by a fourth participant) solved a task together while we collected quantitative and qualitative data, including tracking of positioning/orientation and ratings of the behaviors used. In the data we observed a variety of patterns that can be extrapolated to hypotheses using inductive reasoning. One such pattern/hypothesis is that a (telepresence) robot could pass through a group when retreating, without this affecting how comfortable that retreat is for the group member...
Jered Vroon, Michiel Joosse, Manja Lohse, Jan Kolk
Added 17 Apr 2016
Updated 17 Apr 2016
Type Journal
Year 2015
Where ROMAN
Authors Jered Vroon, Michiel Joosse, Manja Lohse, Jan Kolkmeier, Jaebok Kim, Khiet P. Truong, Gwenn Englebienne, Dirk Heylen, Vanessa Evers
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