The Social Life of Industrial Arms: How Arousal and Attention Shape Human-Robot Interaction
The Social Life of Industrial Arms: How Arousal and Attention Shape Human-Robot Interaction
This study explores how human perceptions of a non-anthropomorphic robotic manipulator are shaped by two key dimensions of behaviour: arousal, defined as the robot's movement energy and expressiveness, and attention, defined as the robot's capacity to selectively orient toward and engage with a user. We introduce a novel control architecture that integrates a gaze-like attention engine with an arousal-modulated motion system to generate socially meaningful behaviours. In a user study, we find that robots exhibiting high attention -- actively directing their focus toward users -- are perceived as warmer and more competent, intentional, and lifelike. In contrast, high arousal -- characterized by fast, expansive, and energetic motions -- increases perceptions of discomfort and disturbance. Importantly, a combination of focused attention and moderate arousal yields the highest ratings of trust and sociability, while excessive arousal diminishes social engagement. These findings offer design insights for endowing non-humanoid robots with expressive, intuitive behaviours that support more natural human-robot interaction.
Roy El-Helou、Matthew K. X. J Pan
计算技术、计算机技术
Roy El-Helou,Matthew K. X. J Pan.The Social Life of Industrial Arms: How Arousal and Attention Shape Human-Robot Interaction[EB/OL].(2025-04-01)[2025-05-01].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.01260.点此复制
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