Human-Robot Handshaking: A Review
Vignesh Prasad, Ruth Stock-Homburg, Jan Peters

TL;DR
This review paper analyzes the current state of human-robot handshaking research, highlighting key findings, factors influencing interactions, and proposing future research directions in social robot touch behaviors.
Contribution
It categorizes existing research on robotic handshaking, synthesizes major findings, and discusses influencing factors and future research pathways.
Findings
Synchronization occurs during interaction phases.
Gaze, voice, facial expressions influence perception.
Personality and mood affect handshake execution.
Abstract
For some years now, the use of social, anthropomorphic robots in various situations has been on the rise. These are robots developed to interact with humans and are equipped with corresponding extremities. They already support human users in various industries, such as retail, gastronomy, hotels, education and healthcare. During such Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) scenarios, physical touch plays a central role in the various applications of social robots as interactive non-verbal behaviour is a key factor in making the interaction more natural. Shaking hands is a simple, natural interaction used commonly in many social contexts and is seen as a symbol of greeting, farewell and congratulations. In this paper, we take a look at the existing state of Human-Robot Handshaking research, categorise the works based on their focus areas, draw out the major findings of these areas while analysing…
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