The Emotionally Intelligent Robot: Improving Social Navigation in Crowded Environments
read the original abstract
We present a real-time algorithm for emotion-aware navigation of a robot among pedestrians. Our approach estimates time-varying emotional behaviors of pedestrians from their faces and trajectories using a combination of Bayesian-inference, CNN-based learning, and the PAD (Pleasure-Arousal-Dominance) model from psychology. These PAD characteristics are used for long-term path prediction and generating proxemic constraints for each pedestrian. We use a multi-channel model to classify pedestrian characteristics into four emotion categories (happy, sad, angry, neutral). In our validation results, we observe an emotion detection accuracy of 85.33%. We formulate emotion-based proxemic constraints to perform socially-aware robot navigation in low- to medium-density environments. We demonstrate the benefits of our algorithm in simulated environments with tens of pedestrians as well as in a real-world setting with Pepper, a social humanoid robot.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
FVA: Modeling Perceived Friendliness of Virtual Agents Using Movement Characteristics
Data-driven friendliness model for virtual agents improves perceived friendliness by 5.71% and social presence by 4.03% in AR user study with HoloLens integration.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.