Basics of Social Interaction

Generally and in the normal situations, human beings feel the need to belong and to be accepted by others. This is not explicitly manifested in our interactions and awareness. In day-to-day interactions we often behave socially simply because we must, in order to achieve non-social goals: like being served at a restaurant, or asking directions to a party we are late to. These task-driven interactions are social because they comply with the rules of interaction of society. Robot companions on the other hand need not affiliate with others, nor fulfill any inner need to be accepted.

Posted by rula.sayaf on Thursday, 20 May, 2010 /

An Autonomous Proxemic System for a Mobile Companion Robot

Oskoei MA, Walters ML, Dautenhahn K.  2010.  An Autonomous Proxemic System for a Mobile Companion Robot. Proceedings Second International Symposium on New Frontiers in Human-Robot Interaction, K. Dautenhahn, J. Saunders (Eds.), at the AISB 2010 convention.
Posted by Dag on Monday, 17 May, 2010 /
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Sarah: An ECA in the wild

Lim MY, Kriegel M, Aylett R, Deshmukh A.  2010.  Sarah: An ECA in the wild. International Workshop on Interacting with ECAs as Virtual Characters, AAMAS.
Posted by myl on Monday, 17 May, 2010 /
in

Designing a Game Companion for Long-Term Social Interaction

Leite I, Castellano G, Pereira A, Martinho C, Paiva A, McOwan PW.  2009.  Designing a Game Companion for Long-Term Social Interaction. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Affect-Aware Virtual Agents and Social Robots (AFFINE'09), ICMI-MLMI'09.
Posted by Ginevra on Thursday, 13 May, 2010 /
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