Biswas, Mriganka and Murray, John
(2014)
Effect of cognitive biases on human-robot interaction: a case study of robot's misattribution.
In: 23rd International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication, IEEE RO-MAN 2014, 25 - 29 Aug 2014, Edinburgh.
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Item Type: | Conference or Workshop contribution (Paper) |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
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Abstract
This paper presents a model for developing long-term human-robot interactions and social relationships based on the principle of 'human' cognitive biases applied to a robot. The aim of this work is to study how a robot influenced with human ‘misattribution’ helps to build better human-robot interactions than unbiased robots.
The results presented in this paper suggest that it is important to know the effect of cognitive biases in human characteristics and interactions in order to better understand how this plays a role in human-human social relationship development. The results presented in this paper show how a single cognitive memory bias i.e. misattribution in robot-human verbal communication allows for better human-robot interaction than similar robot-human communication without misattribution biases.
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