ROApr 6, 2021

Hey Robot, Which Way Are You Going? Nonverbal Motion Legibility Cues for Human-Robot Spatial Interaction

arXiv:2104.02275v145 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the issue of social acceptance and safety for pedestrians interacting with mobile robots in public spaces, representing an incremental improvement in human-robot interaction design.

The study tackled the problem of pedestrians experiencing discomfort and confusion when encountering mobile robots by designing and evaluating nonverbal motion legibility cues, such as Projected Arrows and Flashing Lights, to communicate robot motion intentions; results from an online user study with 229 participants showed that Projected Arrows were more socially acceptable than no cues or Flashing Lights in most conditions.

Mobile robots have recently been deployed in public spaces such as shopping malls, airports, and urban sidewalks. Most of these robots are designed with human-aware motion planning capabilities but are not designed to communicate with pedestrians. Pedestrians that encounter these robots without prior understanding of the robots' behaviour can experience discomfort, confusion, and delayed social acceptance. In this work we designed and evaluated nonverbal robot motion legibility cues, which communicate a mobile robot's motion intention to pedestrians. We compared a motion legibility cue using Projected Arrows to one using Flashing Lights. We designed the cues to communicate path information, goal information, or both, and explored different Robot Movement Scenarios. We conducted an online user study with 229 participants using videos of the motion legibility cues. Our results show that the absence of cues was not socially acceptable, and that Projected Arrows were the more socially acceptable cue in most experimental conditions. We conclude that the presence and choice of motion legibility cues can positively influence robots' acceptance and successful deployment in public spaces.

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