Abstract
Our main goal is to explore how social interaction can evolve incrementally and be materialized in a protocol of communication. We intend to study how the human establishes a protocol of communication in a context that requires mutual adaptation. Sociable Dining Table (SDT) integrates a dish robot put on the table and behaves according to the knocks that the human emits. To achieve our goal, we conducted two experiments: a human-controller experiment (Wizard-of-Oz) and a human-robot interaction (HRI) experiment. The aim of the first experiment is to understand how people are building a protocol of communication. We suggest an actor-critic architecture that simulates in an open ended way the adaptive behavior that we have seen in the first experiment. We show in a human-robot interaction (HRI) experiment that our method enables the adaptation to the individual preferences in order to get a personalized protocol of communication.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Michaud, F., Laplante, J., Larouche, H., Duquette, A., Caron, S., Letourneau, D., Masson, P.: Autonomous spherical mobile robotic to study child development. In: IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, vol. 4, pp. 1–10 (2005)
Condon, W.S., Sander, L.W.: Neonate movement is synchronized with adult speech:interactional participation and language acquisition. Science 183, 99–101 (1974)
Matsumoto, N., Fujii, H., Okada, M.: Minimal design for human agent communication. In: Artificial Life and Robotics, pp. 49–54 (2006)
Okada, Y., Ueda, S., Komatsu, K., Takeshi, O., Kamei, K., Yasuyuki, S., Nishida, T.: Formation conditions of mutual adaptation in human-agent collaborative interaction. Applied Intelligence, 208–228 (2012)
Xu, Y., Ueda, K., Komatsu, T., Okadome, T., Hattori, T., Sumi, Y., Nishida, T.: Woz experiments for understanding mutual adaptation. AI Society, 201–212 (2008)
Thomaz, A.L., Breazeal, C.: Teachable robots: Understanding human teaching behavior to build more effective robot learners. Artificial Intelligence, 716–737 (2000)
Mitsunaga, N., Smith, C., Kanda, T., Ishiguro, H., Hagita, N.: Robot behavior adaptation for human-robot interaction based on policy gradient reinforcement learning. In: Intelligent Robots and Systems, pp. 218–225 (2005)
Crystal, C., Cakmak, M., Thomaz, A.L.: Transparent active learning for robots. In: Human-Robot Interaction, pp. 317–324 (2010)
Subramanian, A., Charles, K., Isbell, L., Thomaz, A.L.: Learning options through human interaction. In: Agents Learning Interactively from Human Teachers, pp. 208–228 (2011)
Kado, Y., Kamoda, T., Yoshiike, Y., De Silva, P.R.S., Okada, M.: Reciprocal-adaptation in a creature-based futuristic sociable dining table. In: 2010 IEEE RO-MAN, pp. 803–808 (2010)
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., De Silva, P.R.S., Okada, M. (2014). Sociable Dining Table: Incremental Meaning Acquisition Based on Mutual Adaptation Process. 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_21
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11973-1_21
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-11972-4
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-11973-1
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)