TY - GEN
T1 - Inferring the goal of an approaching agent
T2 - 2012 21st IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication, RO-MAN 2012
AU - Basili, Patrizia
AU - Huber, Markus
AU - Kourakos, Omiros
AU - Lorenz, Tamara
AU - Brandt, Thomas
AU - Hirche, Sandra
AU - Glasauer, Stefan
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - The ability to infer intentions and predict actions enables coordinating of one's own actions with those of another human and allows smooth and intuitive interaction. The aim to achieve equally effective human-robot interactions is a crucial aspect of current robotic studies. Thus, we assume that studying human-human interaction provides valuable insights allowing to implement mutual intention recognition and action prediction in robotic systems. A common scenario of interaction, be it in everyday life or in an industrial setting, is that two or more agents share the same workspace and perform tasks without interference. If humans are involved, the robots should act sufficiently predictable to enable the human to attribute goals and predict motion trajectories. In the present work, we first analyzed how well a human recognizes the goal of another person entering the room, and whether this ability is deteriorated by concealing gaze direction of the other person. In a second setup, the same experiment was repeated by replacing the approaching person with a wheeled robot. On average, the distance at which subjects predicted the goal of the approaching agent was approx. 4 m and depended on subject and goal position, but not on the type of agent. However, goal attribution showed a considerable proportion of errors for the robot (19%), much less for a human with hidden gaze direction (6%), and almost none for a human with visible gaze (1%). Thus, our subjects apparently decided on the goal of the approaching agent without taking into account the reliability of directional cues, thus resulting in more errors. In a human-robot setting, such wrong predictions about robotic behavior may easily lead to dangerous situations. For smooth and safe interaction, it is therefore important to ameliorate the predictability of robotic actions.
AB - The ability to infer intentions and predict actions enables coordinating of one's own actions with those of another human and allows smooth and intuitive interaction. The aim to achieve equally effective human-robot interactions is a crucial aspect of current robotic studies. Thus, we assume that studying human-human interaction provides valuable insights allowing to implement mutual intention recognition and action prediction in robotic systems. A common scenario of interaction, be it in everyday life or in an industrial setting, is that two or more agents share the same workspace and perform tasks without interference. If humans are involved, the robots should act sufficiently predictable to enable the human to attribute goals and predict motion trajectories. In the present work, we first analyzed how well a human recognizes the goal of another person entering the room, and whether this ability is deteriorated by concealing gaze direction of the other person. In a second setup, the same experiment was repeated by replacing the approaching person with a wheeled robot. On average, the distance at which subjects predicted the goal of the approaching agent was approx. 4 m and depended on subject and goal position, but not on the type of agent. However, goal attribution showed a considerable proportion of errors for the robot (19%), much less for a human with hidden gaze direction (6%), and almost none for a human with visible gaze (1%). Thus, our subjects apparently decided on the goal of the approaching agent without taking into account the reliability of directional cues, thus resulting in more errors. In a human-robot setting, such wrong predictions about robotic behavior may easily lead to dangerous situations. For smooth and safe interaction, it is therefore important to ameliorate the predictability of robotic actions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84870796472&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ROMAN.2012.6343805
DO - 10.1109/ROMAN.2012.6343805
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84870796472
SN - 9781467346054
T3 - Proceedings - IEEE International Workshop on Robot and Human Interactive Communication
SP - 527
EP - 532
BT - 2012 IEEE RO-MAN
Y2 - 9 September 2012 through 13 September 2012
ER -