Authors
Matthew Marge, Claire Bonial, Ashley Foots, Cory Hayes, Cassidy Henry, Kimberly Pollard, Ron Artstein, Clare Voss, David Traum
Publication date
2017/8
Conference
Proceedings of the first workshop on language grounding for robotics
Pages
58-66
Description
Robot-directed communication is variable, and may change based on human perception of robot capabilities. To collect training data for a dialogue system and to investigate possible communication changes over time, we developed a Wizard-of-Oz study that (a) simulates a robot’s limited understanding, and (b) collects dialogues where human participants build a progressively better mental model of the robot’s understanding. With ten participants, we collected ten hours of human-robot dialogue. We analyzed the structure of instructions that participants gave to a remote robot before it responded. Our findings show a general initial preference for including metric information (eg, move forward 3 feet) over landmarks (eg, move to the desk) in motion commands, but this decreased over time, suggesting changes in perception.
Total citations
2017201820192020202120222023202418474421
Scholar articles
M Marge, C Bonial, A Foots, C Hayes, C Henry… - Proceedings of the first workshop on language …, 2017