Title
Have you ever lied?: The impacts of gaze avoidance on people's perception of a robot
Abstract
In human-human interaction, gaze avoidance is usually interpreted as having intention to escape from an embarrassing situation. This study explores whether gaze avoidance by a robot can be delivered as an intention, and whether this intention can make a robot perceived as having sociability and intelligence. We executed a 2 (question type: normal vs. embarrassing) × 2 (gaze type: gaze vs. gaze avoidance) within-participants experiment (N=24). In an embarrassing situation, a robot with gaze avoidance is perceived as more sociable and intelligent than a robot that holds its gaze, while the robot that holds its gaze in a normal situation is perceived as more sociable and intelligent than a robot with gaze avoidance. Implications for the design of human-robot interactions are discussed.
Year
DOI
Venue
2013
10.1109/HRI.2013.6483523
HRI
Keywords
Field
DocType
normal situation,human-robot interactions,sociability,gaze,human-robot interaction,intention,human-human interaction,within-participants experiment,people perception,embarrassing situation,gaze avoidance,question type,indexes,human robot interaction,analysis of variance,psychology
Gaze,Computer science,Human–computer interaction,Robot,Perception,Human–robot interaction
Conference
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
2167-2121 E-ISBN : 978-1-4673-3100-5
978-1-4673-3100-5
3
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.47
2
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jung Ju Choi1346.92
Yunkyung Kim2365.11
Sonya Kwak38021.47