Title
Robot-stated limitations but not intentions promote user assistance.
Abstract
Human-Robot-Interaction (HRI) research is typicallybuilt around the premise that the robot serves to assist a human inachieving a human-led goal or shared task. However, there are manycircumstances during HRI in which a robot may need the assistanceof a human in shared tasks or to achieve goals. We use the ROBOGUIDEmodel as a case study, and insights from social psychology,to examine how a robots personality can impact on user cooperation.A study of 364 participants indicates that individuals may prefer touse likable social robots ahead of those designed to appear more capable;this outcome reflects known social decisions in human interpersonalrelationships. This work further demonstrates the valueof social psychology in developing social robots and exploring HRI.
Year
Venue
Field
2016
arXiv: Robotics
Social robot,User assistance,Simulation,Interpersonal relationship,Premise,Engineering,Robot,Personality
DocType
Volume
Citations 
Journal
abs/1606.02603
2
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.43
4
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
David Cameron132.83
Ee Jing Loh220.43
Adriel Chua320.76
Emily C. Collins4368.51
Jonathan M. Aitken5266.92
James Law682.90