Abstract
Many of the most daily uses of robots require them to work alongside users as cooperative and socially adaptive partners. To provide the human with the better suited assistance at a convenient time, a robot must assimilate the user’s behaviors and afford an adaptive response within the context of the interaction they share. We try to understand how a robot communication that is based on inarticulate sounds and iconic gestures is capable to help on the establishment of the attachment process and can enhance the social bonding between the human and our accompanying mobile robot (ROBOMO). In this paper, we draw on inarticulate sound and iconic gestures in order to design our robot and ground the attachment process. We showed that using simple inarticulate sounds and iconic gestures, the attachment process can evolve incrementally which significantly helped to acquire the meaning of the robot’s behaviors.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Hirschi, T.: Causes of Delinquency. University of California Press, Berkeley (1969)
Aitken, K., Trevarthen, C.: Self/other organization in human psychological development. In: Developmental Psychopathology, pp. 653–677 (1997)
Custodero, L., Fenichel, E.: The Musical Lives of Babies and Families. Zero to three (2002)
Papousek, M.: Intuitive parenting: a hidden source of musical stimulation in infancy. In: Musical Beginnings: Origins and Development of Musical Competence (1996)
Beebe, B., Lachmann, F.M.: Infant Research and Adult Treatment: Co-Constructing Interactions. Analytic Press (2005)
June, M., Gilbey, A., Rennie, A., Ahmedzai, S., Dono, J., Ormerod, E.: Pet ownership and human health: a brief review of evidence and issues In: BMJ (2005)
Kidd, A.H., Kidd, R.M.: Seeking a theory of the human/companion animal bond. In: Anthrozoos, pp. 140–157 (1987)
Melson, G.F.: A multidisciplinary journal of the interactions of people and animals. Berg Journals, 45–52 (1987)
Melson, G.F.: Children’s attachment to their pets: Links to socio-emotional development. Children’s Environments Quarterly, 55–65 (1991)
Forlizzi, J., DiSalvo, C.: Service robots in the domestic environment: A study of the roomba vacuum in the home. In: ACM SIGCHI/SIGART Conference on Human-robot Interaction, pp. 258–265 (2006)
Sung, J., Guo, L., Grinter, R.E., Christensen, H.I.: my roomba is rambo”: Intimate home appliances. In: Sung, J., Guo, L., Grinter, R.E., Christensen, H.I. (eds.) Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing, pp. 145–162 (2007)
Jones, K.S., Schmidlin, E.A.: Human-robot interaction toward usable personal service robots. Reviews of Human Factors and Ergonomics, 100–148 (2011)
Samani, H.A., Cheok, A.D., Foo, W.N., Nagpal, A., Mingde, Q.: Towards a formulation of love in human - robot interaction. In: RO-MAN, pp. 94–99 (2010)
Hiolle, A., Canamero, L., Davila-Ross, M., Bard, K.A.: Eliciting caregiving behavior in dyadic human-robot attachment-like interactions. Interactive Intelligent Systems (2012)
Kina, N., Tanaka, D., Ohshima, N., De Silva, R., Okada, M.: Culot: Sociable creature for child’s playground. In: Human-robot Interaction, pp. 407–408 (2013)
Matsumoto, N., Fujii, H., Okada, M.: Minimal design for human agent communication. In: Artificial Life and Robotics, pp. 49–54 (2006)
Cassell, J., Steedman, M., Badler, N., Pelachaud, C., Stone, M., Douville, B., Prevost, S.: Modeling the interaction between speech and gesture (1994)
Kanda, T., Ishiguro, H., Ono, T., Imai, M., Nakatsu, R.: Development and evaluation of an interactive humanoid robot“robovie”. In: ICRA, pp. 1848–1855 (2002)
Sidner, C.L., Lee, C., Kidd, C.D., Lesh, N., Rich, C.: Explorations in engagement for humans and robots. In: Artificial Intelligence, pp. 140–164 (2005)
Moon, A.J., Parker, C., Croft, E., der Loos, H.F.: Did you see it hesitate? - empirically grounded design of hesitation trajectories for collaborative robots. In: IROS, pp. 1994–1999 (2011)
Noriko, S., Yugo, T., Kazuo, I., Okada, M.: Effects of echoic mimicry using hummed sounds on human computer interaction. Speech Communication, 559–573 (2003)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer International Publishing Switzerland
About this paper
Cite this paper
Youssef, K., Yamagiwa, K., Silva, R., Okada, M. (2014). ROBOMO: Towards an Accompanying Mobile Robot. In: Beetz, M., Johnston, B., Williams, MA. (eds) Social Robotics. ICSR 2014. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 8755. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11973-1_20
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11973-1_20
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-11972-4
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-11973-1
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)