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Human-oriented interaction with an anthropomorphic robot

Version 2 2024-03-12, 21:19
Version 1 2024-03-01, 13:08
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 21:19 authored by Thorsten P. Spexard, Marc HanheideMarc Hanheide, Gerhard Sagerer

A very important aspect in developing robots capable of human-robot interaction (HRI) is the research in natural, human-like communication, and subsequently, the development of a research platform with multiple HRI capabilities for evaluation. Besides a flexible dialog system and speech understanding, an anthropomorphic appearance has the potential to support intuitive usage and understanding of a robot, e.g., human-like facial expressions and deictic gestures can as well be produced and also understood by the robot. As a consequence of our effort in creating an anthropomorphic appearance and to come close to a human- human interaction model for a robot, we decided to use human-like sensors, i.e., two cameras and two microphones only, in analogy to human perceptual capabilities too. Despite the challenges resulting from these limits with respect to perception, a robust attention system for tracking and interacting with multiple persons simultaneously in real time is presented. The tracking approach is sufficiently generic to work on robots with varying hardware, as long as stereo audio data and images of a video camera are available. To easily implement different interaction capabilities like deictic gestures, natural adaptive dialogs, and emotion awareness on the robot, we apply a modular integration approach utilizing XML-based data exchange. The paper focuses on our efforts to bring together different interaction concepts and perception capabilities integrated on a humanoid robot to achieve comprehending human-oriented interaction.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Computer Science (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Robotics, IEEE Transactions on

Volume

23

Issue

5

Pages/Article Number

852-862

Publisher

IEEE

ISSN

1552-3098

eISSN

1941-0468

Date Submitted

2012-11-02

Date Accepted

2007-10-01

Date of First Publication

2007-10-01

Date of Final Publication

2007-10-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2013-03-13

ePrints ID

6741

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    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

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