Improving HRI through robot architecture transparency
Lukas Hindemith, Anna-Lisa Vollmer, Christiane B. Wiebel-Herboth,, Britta Wrede

TL;DR
This paper explores how transparent robot architecture, through visualization and visual programming, enhances non-expert users' understanding and improves human-robot interaction success rates.
Contribution
It introduces FAMILIAR, a transparent robot architecture, and demonstrates that visual programming significantly increases user knowledge and interaction success.
Findings
Visual programming improves user understanding of robot architecture.
Increased knowledge leads to better achievement of interaction goals.
Anthropomorphism may negatively impact interaction success.
Abstract
In recent years, an increased effort has been invested to improve the capabilities of robots. Nevertheless, human-robot interaction remains a complex field of application where errors occur frequently. The reasons for these errors can primarily be divided into two classes. Foremost, the recent increase in capabilities also widened possible sources of errors on the robot's side. This entails problems in the perception of the world, but also faulty behavior, based on errors in the system. Apart from that, non-expert users frequently have incorrect assumptions about the functionality and limitations of a robotic system. This leads to incompatibilities between the user's behavior and the functioning of the robot's system, causing problems on the robot's side and in the human-robot interaction. While engineers constantly improve the reliability of robots, the user's understanding about…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Robot Interaction and HRI · Human-Automation Interaction and Safety · Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts
