Step Aside! VR-Based Evaluation of Adaptive Robot Conflict Resolution Strategies for Domestic Service Robots

As domestic service robots become more prevalent and act autonomously, conflicts of interest between humans and robots become more likely. Hereby, the robot shall be able to negotiate with humans effectively and appropriately to fulfill its tasks. One promising approach could be the imitation of hum...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of social robotics 2022-07, Vol.14 (5), p.1239-1260
Hauptverfasser: Babel, Franziska, Vogt, Andrea, Hock, Philipp, Kraus, Johannes, Angerer, Florian, Seufert, Tina, Baumann, Martin
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 1239
container_title International journal of social robotics
container_volume 14
creator Babel, Franziska
Vogt, Andrea
Hock, Philipp
Kraus, Johannes
Angerer, Florian
Seufert, Tina
Baumann, Martin
description As domestic service robots become more prevalent and act autonomously, conflicts of interest between humans and robots become more likely. Hereby, the robot shall be able to negotiate with humans effectively and appropriately to fulfill its tasks. One promising approach could be the imitation of human conflict resolution behaviour and the use of persuasive requests. The presented study complements previous work by investigating combinations of assertive and polite request elements (appeal, showing benefit, command), which have been found to be effective in HRI. The conflict resolution strategies each contained two types of requests, the order of which was varied to either mimic or contradict human conflict resolution behaviour. The strategies were also adapted to the users’ compliance behaviour. If the participant complied after the first request, no second request was issued. In a virtual reality experiment ( N = 57 ) with two trials, six different strategies were evaluated regarding user compliance, robot acceptance, trust, and fear and compared to a control condition featuring no request elements. The experiment featured a human-robot goal conflict scenario concerning household tasks at home. The results show that in trial 1, strategies reflecting human politeness and conflict resolution norms were more accepted, polite, and trustworthier than strategies entailing a command. No differences were found for trial 2. Overall, compliance rates were comparable to human-human-requests. Compliance rates did not differ between strategies. The contribution is twofold: presenting an experimental paradigm to investigate a human-robot conflict scenario and providing a first step to developing acceptable robot conflict resolution strategies based on human behaviour.
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identifier ISSN: 1875-4791
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subjects Acceptance
Compliance
Conflict resolution
Conflicts of interest
Control
Engineering
Human behavior
Mechatronics
Norms
Robotics
Robots
Service robots
Virtual reality
title Step Aside! VR-Based Evaluation of Adaptive Robot Conflict Resolution Strategies for Domestic Service Robots
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