In the future, humans collaborating closely with cobots in everyday tasks will require handing each other objects. So far, researchers have optimized human-robot collaboration concerning measures such as trust, safety, and enjoyment. However, as the objects themselves influence these measures, we need to investigate how humans perceive the danger level of objects. Thus, we created a database of 153 kitchen objects and conducted an online survey (N=300) investigating their perceived danger level. We found that (1) humans perceive kitchen objects vastly differently, (2) the object-holder has a strong effect on the danger perception, and (3) prior user knowledge increases the perceived danger of robots handling those objects. This shows that future human-robot collaboration studies must investigate different objects for a holistic image. We contribute a wiki-like open-source database to allow others to study predefined danger scenarios and eventually build object-aware systems: https://hri-objects.leusmann.io/.
CITATION STYLE
Leusmann, J., Oechsner, C., Prinz, J., Welsch, R., & Mayer, S. (2023). A Database for Kitchen Objects: Investigating Danger Perception in the Context of Human-Robot Interaction. In Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - Proceedings. Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3544549.3585884
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