Towards a Believable Social Robot

Two perspectives define a human being in his social sphere: appearance and behaviour. The aesthetic aspect is the first significant element that impacts a communication while the behavioural aspect is a crucial factor in evaluating the ongoing interaction. In particular, we have more expectations when interacting with anthropomorphic robots and we tend to define them believable if they respect human social conventions. Therefore researchers are focused both on increasingly anthropomorphizing the embodiment of the robots and on giving the robots a realistic behaviour. This paper describes our research on making a humanoid robot socially interacting with human beings in a believable way.

[1]  Garrison W. Cottrell,et al.  Visual saliency model for robot cameras , 2008, 2008 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation.

[2]  Danilo De Rossi,et al.  HEFES: An Hybrid Engine for Facial Expressions Synthesis to control human-like androids and avatars , 2012, 2012 4th IEEE RAS & EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BioRob).

[3]  Robert M. Wygant CLIPS - a powerful development and delivery expert system tool , 1989 .

[4]  M. Argyle,et al.  Gaze and Mutual Gaze , 1994, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[5]  Danilo De Rossi,et al.  Development and evaluation of a social robot platform for therapy in autism , 2011, 2011 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.