Towards Fluent Interaction with Cyber-Physical Architecture
This addresses the challenge of creating trusted, collaborative robotic environments for everyday users, but it is incremental as it builds on existing interaction design research.
The paper tackled the problem of designing human-robot interaction for shape-changing architectural environments, revealing user desires and practical challenges through two studies, including the need for a modality-agnostic model of evolving user intent.
What happens when your walls begin to move? This paper explores the design of human-robot interaction for architectural-scale, shape-changing environments. We present findings from two studies: (1) a series of speculative design workshops (N=20) that uncovered aspirational visions for these spaces, and (2) a task-based Wizard-of-Oz elicitation study (N=12) that grounded these visions in the challenges of practical interaction. Our workshop findings reveal a complex landscape of user desires, exposing critical tensions between proactive automation and the preservation of user autonomy, and between personalization and public ownership. Our elicitation study reveals a set of core interaction challenges related to multimodal collaboration; and, most critically: suggests the need for a modality-agnostic model of evolving user intent. We conclude with a set of grounded proposals for creating robotic environments that are collaborative and trusted partners in everyday life.