The Challenges of Designing a Robot for a Satisfaction Survey: Surveying Humans Using a Social Robot

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Abstract

The field of social robotics promises robots that can interact with humans in a variety of naturalistic ways, due to their embodiment, considered form, and social abilities. For providing a satisfaction survey, when compared to a web-based form, a social robot is theoretically capable of providing some of the benefits of a face-to-face interview without requiring a human. In this paper we set up our social robot, Opie, with a dialog-enabled chat-bot to run a satisfaction survey using off-the-shelf technologies. We collected audio and transcripts during the interaction, and attitudes towards the survey after the interaction. Twenty-one participants were recruited for the study, each played two games on a tablet and answered survey questions to the robot and through an electronic form. The results indicated that while participants were able to provide answers to questions, none of the components of the robot were robust to all the different situations that emerged during the satisfaction survey. From these results, we discuss how errors affected survey answers (when compared to the electronic form), and attitudes towards the robot. We conclude with recommendations for a set of non-trivial abilities that are needed before social robot surveyors are a reality.

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Heath, S., Liddle, J., & Wiles, J. (2020). The Challenges of Designing a Robot for a Satisfaction Survey: Surveying Humans Using a Social Robot. International Journal of Social Robotics, 12(2), 519–533. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12369-019-00604-0

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