Covert Robot-Robot Communication: Human Perceptions and Implications for HRI

2015

Journal: Journal of Human-Robot Interaction
Volume: 4
Pages: 23--49

Tom Williams and Priscilla Briggs and Matthias Scheutz

As future human-robot teams are envisioned for a variety of application domains, researchers have begun to investigate how humans and robots can communicate effectively and naturally in the context of human-robot team tasks. While a growing body of work is focused on human-robot communication and human perceptions thereof, there is currently little work on human perceptions of robot-robot communication. Understanding how robots should communicate information to each other in the presence of human teammates is an important open question for human-robot teaming. In this paper, we present two human-robot interaction (HRI) experiments investigating the human perception of verbal and silent robot-robot communication as part of a human-robot team task. The results suggest that silent communication of task-dependent, human-understandable information among robots is perceived as creepy by cooperative, co-located human teammates. Hence, we propose that, absent specific evidence to the contrary, robots in cooperative human-robot team settings need to be sensitive to human expectations about overt communication, and we encourage future work to investigate possible ways to modulate such expectations.

@article{williamsetal15jhri,
  title={Covert Robot-Robot Communication: Human Perceptions and Implications for HRI},
  author={Tom Williams and Priscilla Briggs and Matthias Scheutz},
  year={2015},
  journal={Journal of Human-Robot Interaction},
  volume={4},
  pages={23--49}
  url={https://hrilab.tufts.edu/publications/williamsetal15jhri.pdf}
  doi={10.5898/JHRI.4.2.Williams}
}