Abstract

During the last years, many solutions have been proposed to achieve a natural Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) and Communication paving the way to new paradigms of under-standing and adaptation based on mutual affective perception. Especially in human-robot social interaction, it is helpful not only that people can understand the robot’s behavioral state, but also robots possess the ability to detect, interpret and adaptively react to human affective responses. Typical approaches are able to assess humans’ affective responses from the observation of overt behavior. However, there are cases in which the overt observable behaviors could not match with the internal states (e.g., people with diseases compromising normal emotional responses). In such cases, having an objective measure of the users’ state from ‘inside’ is of paramount importance. This work presents an affect detection model able to provide a measure of the human affective state, with particular focus on the stress state, from the analysis of EEG users’ activity during the interaction with a social humanoid robot endowed with diverse affective elicitation behaviors. We argue that monitoring the stress state of a human during HRI is necessary to adapt the robot behavior in a way to avoid possible counterproductive effects of its use.

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