Abstract

Human–human interaction in natural environments relies on a variety of perceptual cues. Humanoid robots are becoming increasingly refined in their sensorimotor capabilities, and thus should now be able to manipulate and exploit these social cues in cooperation with their human partners. Previous studies have demonstrated that people follow human and robot gaze, and that it can help them to cope with spatially ambiguous language. Our goal is to extend these findings into the domain of action, to determine how human and robot gaze can influence the speed and accuracy of human action. We report on results from a human–human cooperation experiment demonstrating that an agent’s vision of her/his partner’s gaze can significantly improve that agent’s performance in a cooperative task. We then implement a heuristic capability to generate such gaze cues by a humanoid robot that engages in the same cooperative interaction. The subsequent human–robot experiments demonstrate that a human agent can indeed exploit the predictive gaze of their robot partner in a cooperative task. This allows us to render the humanoid robot more human-like in its ability to communicate with humans. The long term objectives of the work are thus to identify social cooperation cues, and to validate their pertinence through implementation in a cooperative robot. The current research provides the robot with the capability to produce appropriate speech and gaze cues in the context of human–robot cooperation tasks. Gaze is manipulated in three conditions: Full gaze (coordinated eye and head), eyes hidden with sunglasses, and head fixed. We demonstrate the pertinence of these cues in terms of statistical measures of action times for humans in the context of a cooperative task, as gaze significantly facilitates cooperation as measured by human response times.

Highlights

  • One of the most central and important factors in the real-time control of cooperative human interaction is the use of gaze to coordinate and ensure that one’s interlocutor is present, paying attention, attending to the intended elements in the scene and checking back on the status of the situation (Kendon, 1967)

  • The informer signals the location of the target cube by gaze, and the manipulator exploits this gaze in making the reaching movement toward the target block more rapidly

  • They demonstrated that the manipulator’s gaze follows that of the informer, and we demonstrated that this allows for more efficient behavior in the cooperative task

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most central and important factors in the real-time control of cooperative human interaction is the use of gaze (i.e., the combined orienting movements of the eyes and head) to coordinate and ensure that one’s interlocutor is present, paying attention, attending to the intended elements in the scene and checking back on the status of the situation (Kendon, 1967). In this context, gaze is highly communicative both in indicating one’s own attentional focus and in following that of the interlocutor. The objective of the current research is to identify pertinent gaze cues in human–human cooperative interaction, and to test the impact of these cues in human–robot cooperation

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