Toward a Universal Concept of Artificial Personality: Implementing Robotic Personality in a Kinova Arm
Alice Nardelli, Lorenzo Landolfi, Dario Pasquali, Antonio Sgorbissa,, Francesco Rea, Carmine Recchiuto

TL;DR
This paper explores implementing a unified robotic personality in a Kinova arm using a cognitive architecture based on human personality traits, aiming to enhance human-robot interaction regardless of robot shape.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive personality model applied to a non-humanoid robot and investigates how language influences perception of robot personality.
Findings
Participants perceived distinct personalities in the robot.
Verbal communication enhanced personality perception.
The personality model was effective across different robot forms.
Abstract
The fundamental role of personality in shaping interactions is increasingly being exploited in robotics. A carefully designed robotic personality has been shown to improve several key aspects of Human-Robot Interaction (HRI). However, the fragmentation and rigidity of existing approaches reveal even greater challenges when applied to non-humanoid robots. On one hand, the state of the art is very dispersed; on the other hand, Industry 4.0 is moving towards a future where humans and industrial robots are going to coexist. In this context, the proper design of a robotic personality can lead to more successful interactions. This research takes a first step in that direction by integrating a comprehensive cognitive architecture built upon the definition of robotic personality - validated on humanoid robots - into a robotic Kinova Jaco2 arm. The robot personality is defined through the…
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