Choreographic and Somatic Approaches for the Development of Expressive Robotic Systems
Amy LaViers, Catie Cuan, Madison Heimerdinger, Umer Huzaifa, Catherine, Maguire, Reika McNish, Alexandra Nilles, Ishaan Pakrasi, Karen Bradley, Kim, Brooks Mata, Novoneel Chakraborty, Ilya Vidrin, and Alexander Zurawski

TL;DR
This paper explores how choreographic and somatic movement techniques can inform the design of expressive robotic systems, emphasizing human perception and interdisciplinary collaboration for improved human-robot interaction.
Contribution
It introduces interdisciplinary methods from choreography and somatics into robotics, providing practical approaches and guiding principles for developing expressive, human-interpretable robotic movements.
Findings
Community building activities enhance interdisciplinary research
Movement analysis improves robot motion planning
User studies reveal human interpretation of robot movement
Abstract
As robotic systems are moved out of factory work cells into human-facing environments questions of choreography become central to their design, placement, and application. With a human viewer or counterpart present, a system will automatically be interpreted within context, style of movement, and form factor by human beings as animate elements of their environment. The interpretation by this human counterpart is critical to the success of the system's integration: knobs on the system need to make sense to a human counterpart; an artificial agent should have a way of notifying a human counterpart of a change in system state, possibly through motion profiles; and the motion of a human counterpart may have important contextual clues for task completion. Thus, professional choreographers, dance practitioners, and movement analysts are critical to research in robotics. They have design…
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