Applied Sciences (Nov 2021)

From Social Gaze to Indirect Speech Constructions: How to Induce the Impression That Your Companion Robot Is a Conscious Creature

  • Boris M. Velichkovsky,
  • Artemiy Kotov,
  • Nikita Arinkin,
  • Liudmila Zaidelman,
  • Anna Zinina,
  • Kirill Kivva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app112110255
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 21
p. 10255

Abstract

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We implemented different modes of social gaze behavior in our companion robot, F-2, to evaluate the impression of the gaze behaviors on humans in three symmetric communicative situations: (a) the robot telling a story, (b) the person telling a story to the robot, and (c) both parties communicating about objects in the real world while solving a Tangram puzzle. In all the situations the robot localized the human’s eyes and directed its gaze between the human, the environment, and the object of interest in the problem space (if it existed). We examined the balance between different gaze directions as the novel key element to maintaining a feeling of social connection with the robot in humans. We extended the computer model of the robot in order to simulate realistic gaze behavior in the robot and create the impression of the robot changing its internal cognitive states. Other novel results include the implicit, rather than explicit, character of the robot gaze perception for many of our subjects and the role of individual differences, especially the level of emotional intelligence, in terms of human sensitivity to the robotic gaze. Therefore, in this study, we used an iterative approach, extending the applied cognitive architecture in order to simulate the balance between different behavioral reactions and to test it in the experiments. In such a way, we came to a description of the key behavioral cues that suggest to a person that the particular robot can be perceived as an emotional and even conscious creature.

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