Authors
Cristen Torrey, Aaron Powers, Matthew Marge, Susan R Fussell, Sara Kiesler
Publication date
2006/3/2
Book
Proceedings of the 1st ACM SIGCHI/SIGART conference on Human-robot interaction
Pages
126-133
Description
Human-robot interaction could be improved by designing robots that engage in adaptive dialogue with users. An adaptive robot could estimate the information needs of individuals and change its dialogue to suit these needs. We test the value of adaptive robot dialogue by experimentally comparing the effects of adaptation versus no adaptation on information exchange and social relations. In Experiment 1, a robot chef adapted to novices by providing detailed explanations of cooking tools; doing so improved information exchange for novice participants but did not influence experts. Experiment 2 added incentives for speed and accuracy and replicated the results from Experiment 1 with respect to information exchange. When the robot's dialogue was adapted for expert knowledge (names of tools rather than explanations), expert participants found the robot to be more effective, more authoritative, and less …
Total citations
200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202438643447287116658245
Scholar articles
C Torrey, A Powers, M Marge, SR Fussell, S Kiesler - Proceedings of the 1st ACM SIGCHI/SIGART …, 2006