Abstract

We will increasingly become dependent on automation to support our manufacturing and daily living, and robots are likely to take an important place in this. Unfortunately, currently not all the robots are accessible for all users. This is due to the different characteristics of users, as users with visual, hearing, motor or cognitive disabilities were not considered during the design, implementation or interaction phase, causing accessibility barriers to users who have limitations. This research presents a proposal for accessibility guidelines for human-robot interaction (HRI). The guidelines have been evaluated by seventeen HRI designers and/or developers. A questionnaire of nine five-point Likert Scale questions and 6 open-ended questions was developed to evaluate the proposed guidelines for developers and designers, in terms of four main factors: usability, social acceptance, user experience and social impact. The questions act as indicators for each factor. The majority (15 of 17 participants) agreed that the guidelines are helpful for them to design and implement accessible robot interfaces and applications. Some of them had considered some ad hoc guidelines in their design practice, but none of them showed awareness of or had applied all the proposed guidelines in their design practice, 72% of the proposed guidelines have been applied by less than or equal to 8 participants for each guideline. Moreover, 16 of 17 participants would use the proposed guidelines in their future robot designs or evaluation. The participants recommended the importance of aligning the proposed guidelines with safety requirements, environment of interaction (indoor or outdoor), cost and users’ expectations.

Highlights

  • Diversity in technology has become pervasive in everyday life

  • That is why in this paper we propose a set of accessibility guidelines, to help human-robot interaction designers and developers to construct accessible robots for all

  • In this work we proposed accessibility guidelines for human-robot interaction (HRI)

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Summary

Introduction

Diversity in technology has become pervasive in everyday life. Robot designers and developers must consider in their designs and products a wide range of potential users with a great diversity of abilities and needs. Implementing accessible robots requires a deep knowledge of interaction barriers that people could face when using each robot component, depending on their interaction characteristics, abilities and capabilities. Most of the HRI designers and developers have limited awareness of accessibility issues, and a tool for helping them to apply this knowledge in their designs and implementations would be useful. That is why in this paper we propose a set of accessibility guidelines, to help human-robot interaction designers and developers to construct accessible robots for all

Socially Assistive Robotics
Accessibility Barriers in HRI
Auditory Disabilities
Cognitive Disabilities
Accessibility Laws and Guidelines for HCI
Accessibility Laws and Guidelines for HRI
Proposed Accessibility Guidelines for HRI
Participants
Materials
Protocol
Evaluation Conclusions
Question
Conclusions and Further Research
Full Text
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