ROHCFeb 20, 2022

In the Arms of a Robot: Designing Autonomous Hugging Robots with Intra-Hug Gestures

arXiv:2202.09935v145 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of creating affective human-robot interactions, specifically for social robotics, though it is incremental in advancing existing robot hugging systems.

The authors tackled the problem of designing autonomous hugging robots by developing guidelines and algorithms for perceiving and responding to human intra-hug gestures, achieving 88% classification accuracy and improved user ratings for naturalness and enjoyment.

Hugs are complex affective interactions that often include gestures like squeezes. We present six new guidelines for designing interactive hugging robots, which we validate through two studies with our custom robot. To achieve autonomy, we investigated robot responses to four human intra-hug gestures: holding, rubbing, patting, and squeezing. Thirty-two users each exchanged and rated sixteen hugs with an experimenter-controlled HuggieBot 2.0. The robot's inflated torso's microphone and pressure sensor collected data of the subjects' demonstrations that were used to develop a perceptual algorithm that classifies user actions with 88\% accuracy. Users enjoyed robot squeezes, regardless of their performed action, they valued variety in the robot response, and they appreciated robot-initiated intra-hug gestures. From average user ratings, we created a probabilistic behavior algorithm that chooses robot responses in real time. We implemented improvements to the robot platform to create HuggieBot 3.0 and then validated its gesture perception system and behavior algorithm with sixteen users. The robot's responses and proactive gestures were greatly enjoyed. Users found the robot more natural, enjoyable, and intelligent in the last phase of the experiment than in the first. After the study, they felt more understood by the robot and thought robots were nicer to hug.

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