Gaze in Human-robot Communication

Broz, F., H. Lehmann, B. Mutlu, and Y. Nakano. Gaze in Human-Robot Communication. 2015.

Abstract

Gaze in Human-Robot Communication is a volume collecting recent research studying gaze behaviour in human-robot interaction (HRI). The selected articles draw inspiration from related research into gaze in human-human interaction in fields ranging from ethnography to neuroscience. The major themes of these articles include: the experimental investigation of human responses to robot gaze, the investigation of the impact of coordinating gaze acts with speech, and the development of hardware and software technologies for enabling robot gaze. This volume provides an excellent introduction to the depth and breadth of this growing research area in HRI. The highly interdisciplinary nature of the work presented should make it of interest both to robotics researchers and to researchers from other fields with an interest in the role of gaze in communication.

DOI: 10.1075/bct.81

BibTex

@book{10.5555/2987914, author = {Broz, Frank and Lehmann, Hagen and Mutlu, Bilge and Nakano, Yukiko}, title = {Gaze in Human-Robot Communication}, year = {2015}, isbn = {9027242690}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, abstract = {Gaze in Human-Robot Communication is a volume collecting recent research studying gaze behaviour in human-robot interaction (HRI). The selected articles draw inspiration from related research into gaze in human-human interaction in fields ranging from ethnography to neuroscience. The major themes of these articles include: the experimental investigation of human responses to robot gaze, the investigation of the impact of coordinating gaze acts with speech, and the development of hardware and software technologies for enabling robot gaze. This volume provides an excellent introduction to the depth and breadth of this growing research area in HRI. The highly interdisciplinary nature of the work presented should make it of interest both to robotics researchers and to researchers from other fields with an interest in the role of gaze in communication.Originally published in Interaction Studies Vol. 14:3 (2013).} }