Alessandra Rossi

RO
7papers
15citations
Novelty11%
AI Score16

7 Papers

ROJun 7, 2022
The Road to a Successful HRI: AI, Trust and ethicS-TRAITS

Alessandra Rossi, Antonio Andriella, Silvia Rossi et al.

The aim of this workshop is to foster the exchange of insights on past and ongoing research towards effective and long-lasting collaborations between humans and robots. This workshop will provide a forum for representatives from academia and industry communities to analyse the different aspects of HRI that impact on its success. We particularly focus on AI techniques required to implement autonomous and proactive interactions, on the factors that enhance, undermine, or recover humans' acceptance and trust in robots, and on the potential ethical and legal concerns related to the deployment of such robots in human-centred environments. Website: https://sites.google.com/view/traits-hri-2022

ROMar 13, 2022
A ROS Architecture for Personalised HRI with a Bartender Social Robot

Alessandra Rossi, Maria Di Maro, Antonio Origlia et al.

BRILLO (Bartending Robot for Interactive Long-Lasting Operations) project has the overall goal of creating an autonomous robotic bartender that can interact with customers while accomplishing its bartending tasks. In such a scenario, people's novelty effect connected to the use of an attractive technology is destined to wear off and, consequently, it negatively affects the success of the service robotics application. For this reason, providing personalised natural interaction while accessing its services is of paramount importance for increasing users' engagement and, consequently, their loyalty. In this paper, we present the developed three-layers ROS architecture integrating a perception layer managing the processing of different social signals, a decision-making layer for handling multi-party interactions, and an execution layer controlling the behaviour of a complex robot composed of arms and a face. Finally, user modelling through a beliefs layer allows for personalised interaction.

RONov 20, 2023
Common (good) practices measuring trust in HRI

Patrick Holthaus, Alessandra Rossi

Trust in robots is widely believed to be imperative for the adoption of robots into people's daily lives. It is, therefore, understandable that the literature of the last few decades focuses on measuring how much people trust robots -- and more generally, any agent - to foster such trust in these technologies. Researchers have been exploring how people trust robot in different ways, such as measuring trust on human-robot interactions (HRI) based on textual descriptions or images without any physical contact, during and after interacting with the technology. Nevertheless, trust is a complex behaviour, and it is affected and depends on several factors, including those related to the interacting agents (e.g. humans, robots, pets), itself (e.g. capabilities, reliability), the context (e.g. task), and the environment (e.g. public spaces vs private spaces vs working spaces). In general, most roboticists agree that insufficient levels of trust lead to a risk of disengagement while over-trust in technology can cause over-reliance and inherit dangers, for example, in emergency situations. It is, therefore, very important that the research community has access to reliable methods to measure people's trust in robots and technology. In this position paper, we outline current methods and their strengths, identify (some) weakly covered aspects and discuss the potential for covering a more comprehensive amount of factors influencing trust in HRI.

ROApr 22, 2019Code
Bold Hearts Team Description for RoboCup 2019 (Humanoid Kid Size League)

Marcus M. Scheunemann, Sander G. van Dijk, Rebecca Miko et al.

We participated in the RoboCup 2018 competition in Montreal with our newly developed BoldBot based on the Darwin-OP and mostly self-printed custom parts. This paper is about the lessons learnt from that competition and further developments for the RoboCup 2019 competition. Firstly, we briefly introduce the team along with an overview of past achievements. We then present a simple, standalone 2D simulator we use for simplifying the entry for new members with making basic RoboCup concepts quickly accessible. We describe our approach for semantic-segmentation for our vision used in the 2018 competition, which replaced the lookup-table (LUT) implementation we had before. We also discuss the extra structural support we plan to add to the printed parts of the BoldBot and our transition to ROS 2 as our new middleware. Lastly, we will present a collection of open-source contributions of our team.

ROAug 18, 2021
Trust, Acceptance and Social Cues in Human-Robot Interaction -- SCRITA 2021

Alessandra Rossi, Patrick Holthaus, Sílvia Moros et al.

This workshop aimed for a deeper exploration of trust and acceptance in human-robot interaction (HRI) from a multidisciplinary perspective including robots' capabilities of sensing and perceiving other agents, the environment, and human-robot dynamics. The workshop was held online in conjunction with IEEE RO-MAN 2021 (see https://ro-man2021.org/). Three invited speakers and six position papers analysed/discussed different aspects of human-robot interaction that can affect, enhance, undermine, or recover humans' trust in robots, such as the use of social cues or behaviour transparency. The attendees of different backgrounds engaged in a dynamic conversation about the relevant challenges of effectively supporting the design and development of socially acceptable and trustable robots. Website: https://scrita.herts.ac.uk/2021/

ROMar 24, 2021
I Know What You Would Like to Drink: Benefits and Detriments of Sharing Personal Info with a Bartender Robot

Alessandra Rossi, Vito Giura, Carmine Di Leva et al.

This paper introduces benefits and detriments of a robot bartender that is capable of adapting the interaction with human users according to their preferences in drinks, music, and hobbies. We believe that a personalised experience during a human-robot interaction increases the human user's engagement with the robot and that such information will be used by the robot during the interaction. However, this implies that the users need to share several personal information with the robot. In this paper, we introduce the research topic and our approach to evaluate people's perceptions and consideration of their privacy with a robot. We present a within-subject study in which participants interacted twice with a robot that firstly had not any previous info about the users, and, then, having a knowledge of their preferences. We observed that less than 60\% of the participants were not concerned about sharing personal information with the robot.

ROMar 23, 2021
The Road to a Successful HRI: AI, Trust and ethicS-TRAITS

Antonio Andriella, Alessandra Rossi, Silvia Rossi et al.

The aim of this workshop is to give researchers from academia and industry the possibility to discuss the inter-and multi-disciplinary nature of the relationships between people and robots towards effective and long-lasting collaborations. This workshop will provide a forum for the HRI and robotics communities to explore successful human-robot interaction (HRI) to analyse the different aspects of HRI that impact its success. Particular focus are the AI algorithms required to implement autonomous interactions, and the factors that enhance, undermine, or recover humans' trust in robots. Finally, potential ethical and legal concerns, and how they can be addressed will be considered. Website: https://sites.google.com/view/traits-hri