Investigating the integration of human-like and machine-like robot behaviors in a shared elevator scenario

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Abstract

This paper examines the advantages and disadvantages of combining Human-Like and Machine-Like behaviors for a robot taking a shared elevator with a bystander as part of an ofce delivery service scenario. We present fndings of an in-person wizard-of-oz experiment that builds on and implements behavior policies developed in a previous study. In this experiment, we found that the combination of Machine-Like and Human-Like behaviors was perceived as better than Human-Like behaviors alone. We discuss possible reasons and point to key capabilities that a socially competent robot should have to achieve better Human-Like behaviors in order to seamlessly negotiate a social encounter with bystanders in a shared elevator or similar scenario. We found that establishing and maintaining a shared transactional space is one of these key requirements.

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Gallo, D., Bioche, P., Willamowski, J., Colombino, T., Gonzalez-Jimenez, S., Poirier, H., & Boulard, C. (2023). Investigating the integration of human-like and machine-like robot behaviors in a shared elevator scenario. In ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (pp. 192–201). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.1145/3568162.3576974

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