Brain Responses During Robot-Error Observation
Dominik Welke, Joos Behncke, Marina Hader, Robin Tibor Schirrmeister,, Andreas Sch\"onau, Boris E{\ss}mann, Oliver M\"uller, Wolfram Burgard, Tonio, Ball

TL;DR
This study investigates whether EEG brain responses during robot observation can reveal if the robot's actions are correct and if the robot's appearance influences brain activity, aiding adaptive human-robot interaction.
Contribution
It demonstrates that EEG signals can decode perceived robot action correctness and robot type, advancing understanding of neural responses in human-robot interaction.
Findings
Decodable brain responses for robot action correctness.
Decodable brain responses for robot type.
Above chance decoding accuracy in most participants.
Abstract
Brain-controlled robots are a promising new type of assistive device for severely impaired persons. Little is however known about how to optimize the interaction of humans and brain-controlled robots. Information about the human's perceived correctness of robot performance might provide a useful teaching signal for adaptive control algorithms and thus help enhancing robot control. Here, we studied whether watching robots perform erroneous vs. correct action elicits differential brain responses that can be decoded from single trials of electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings, and whether brain activity during human-robot interaction is modulated by the robot's visual similarity to a human. To address these topics, we designed two experiments. In experiment I, participants watched a robot arm pour liquid into a cup. The robot performed the action either erroneously or correctly, i.e. it…
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