Müller, Ana; Richert, Anja:
Egocentric Robots in a Human-Centric World? Exploring Group-Robot-Interaction in Public Spaces
In: De.arXiv.org (2024-07-25)
2024-07-25Aufsatz / Artikel in ZeitschriftOpen Access
Fakultät für Anlagen, Energie- und Maschinensysteme
Titel:
Egocentric Robots in a Human-Centric World? Exploring Group-Robot-Interaction in Public Spaces
Autor*in:
Müller, AnaTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0006985
SCOPUS
57944865000
SCOPUS
58593076700
Sonstiges
der TH Köln zugeordnete Person
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
;
Richert, AnjaTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0003203
SCOPUS
36176257900
Sonstiges
der TH Köln zugeordnete Person
Veröffentlicht am:
2024-07-25
OA-Publikationsweg:
Open Access
arXiv.org ID
arXiv.org ID
Hinweis:
Accepted at the workshop on advancing Group Understanding and robots' adaptive behavior (GROUND), held at the Robotics Science and Systems (RSS) Conference, 2024. Winner Best Poster Award (2024).
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Schlagwort, Thema:
Group-Robot-Interaction ; Human-Robot-Interaction ; Multi-Party-Interaction ; Public Spaces ; HRI
Ressourcentyp:
Text
Peer Reviewed:
Peer Reviewed
Praxispartner*in:
Ja
Kategorie:
Forschung
Teil der Statistik:
Teil der Statistik

Abstract in Englisch:

The deployment of social robots in real-world scenarios is increasing, supporting humans in various contexts. However, they still struggle to grasp social dynamics, especially in public spaces, sometimes resulting in violations of social norms, such as interrupting human conversations. This behavior, originating from a limited processing of social norms, might be perceived as robot-centered. Understanding social dynamics, particularly in group-robot-interactions (GRI), underscores the need for further research and development in human-robot-interaction (HRI). Enhancing the interaction abilities of social robots, especially in GRIs, can improve their effectiveness in real-world applications on a micro-level, as group interactions lead to increased motivation and comfort. In this study, we assessed the influence of the interaction condition (dyadic vs. triadic) on the perceived extraversion (ext.) of social robots in public spaces. The research involved 40 HRIs, including 24 dyadic (i.e., one human and one robot) interactions and 16 triadic interactions, which involve at least three entities, including the robot.