Position paper outlines a multi-modal physiological experiment to estimate real-time mental load using pupil size, blink rate, HR, and HRV during a difficulty-varied language task.
Playing Pairs with Pepper
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abstract
As robots become increasingly prevalent in almost all areas of society, the factors affecting humans trust in those robots becomes increasingly important. This paper is intended to investigate the factor of robot attributes, looking specifically at the relationship between anthropomorphism and human development of trust. To achieve this, an interaction game, Matching the Pairs, was designed and implemented on two robots of varying levels of anthropomorphism, Pepper and Husky. Participants completed both pre- and post-test questionnaires that were compared and analyzed predominantly with the use of quantitative methods, such as paired sample t-tests. Post-test analyses suggested a positive relationship between trust and anthropomorphism with $80\%$ of participants confirming that the robots' adoption of facial features assisted in establishing trust. The results also indicated a positive relationship between interaction and trust with $90\%$ of participants confirming this for both robots post-test
fields
cs.HC 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Multi-Modal Measurements of Mental Load
Position paper outlines a multi-modal physiological experiment to estimate real-time mental load using pupil size, blink rate, HR, and HRV during a difficulty-varied language task.