Gaze Cueing and the Role of Presence in Human-Robot Interaction
Kassandra Friebe, Kristina Malinovska, Sabina Samporova, Matej, Hoffmann

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the physical presence of a humanoid robot influences the gaze cueing effect in human-robot interaction, finding that presence does not significantly alter the effect in simple gaze-based tasks.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that physical presence of a humanoid robot does not significantly impact gaze cueing effects in simple interaction scenarios.
Findings
Participants' reaction times were affected by robot gaze regardless of presence.
Presence did not significantly influence perceptions of anthropomorphism, animacy, or likeability.
Gaze cueing effects generalize from virtual to physically present robots.
Abstract
Gaze cueing is a fundamental part of social interactions, and broadly studied using Posner task based gaze cueing paradigms. While studies using human stimuli consistently yield a gaze cueing effect, results from studies using robotic stimuli are inconsistent. Typically, these studies use virtual agents or pictures of robots. As previous research has pointed to the significance of physical presence in human-robot interaction, it is of fundamental importance to understand its yet unexplored role in interactions with gaze cues. This paper investigates whether the physical presence of the iCub humanoid robot affects the strength of the gaze cueing effect in human-robot interaction. We exposed 42 participants to a gaze cueing task. We asked participants to react as quickly and accurately as possible to the appearance of a target stimulus that was either congruently or incongruently cued by…
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