Ashley Foots
2017
Exploring Variation of Natural Human Commands to a Robot in a Collaborative Navigation Task
Matthew Marge
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Claire Bonial
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Ashley Foots
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Cory Hayes
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Cassidy Henry
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Kimberly Pollard
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Ron Artstein
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Clare Voss
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David Traum
Proceedings of the First Workshop on Language Grounding for Robotics
Robot-directed communication is variable, and may change based on human perception of robot capabilities. To collect training data for a dialogue system and to investigate possible communication changes over time, we developed a Wizard-of-Oz study that (a) simulates a robot’s limited understanding, and (b) collects dialogues where human participants build a progressively better mental model of the robot’s understanding. With ten participants, we collected ten hours of human-robot dialogue. We analyzed the structure of instructions that participants gave to a remote robot before it responded. Our findings show a general initial preference for including metric information (e.g., move forward 3 feet) over landmarks (e.g., move to the desk) in motion commands, but this decreased over time, suggesting changes in perception.
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Co-authors
- Matthew Marge 1
- Claire Bonial 1
- Cory Hayes 1
- Cassidy Henry 1
- Kimberly Pollard 1
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