Abel: Integrating humanoid body, emotions, and time perception to investigate social interaction and human cognition

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Abstract

Humanoids have been created for assisting or replacing humans in many applications, providing encouraging results in contexts where social and emotional interaction is required, such as healthcare, education, and therapy. Bioinspiration, that has often guided the design of their bodies and minds, made them also become excellent research tools, probably the best platform by which we can model, test, and understand the human mind and behavior. Driven by the aim of creating a believable robot for interactive applications, as well as a research platform for investigating human cognition and emotion, we are constructing a new humanoid social robot: Abel. In this paper, we discussed three of the fundamental principles that motivated the design of Abel and its cognitive and emotional system: hyper-realistic humanoid aesthetics, human-inspired emotion processing, and human-like perception of time. After reporting a brief state-of-the-art on the related topics, we present the robot at its stage of development, what are the perspectives for its application, and how it could satisfy the expectations as a tool to investigate the human mind, behavior, and consciousness.

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Cominelli, L., Hoegen, G., & De Rossi, D. (2021). Abel: Integrating humanoid body, emotions, and time perception to investigate social interaction and human cognition. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 11(3), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11031070

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