Reverse Engineering Psychologically Valid Facial Expressions of Emotion into Social Robots

被引:24
作者
Chen, Chaona [1 ]
Garrod, Oliver G. B. [1 ]
Zhan, Jiayu [1 ]
Beskow, Jonas [2 ]
Schyns, Philippe G. [1 ]
Jack, Rachael E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Glasgow, Inst Neurosci & Psychol, Glasgow G12 8QB, Lanark, Scotland
[2] Furhat Robot, S-11428 Stockholm, Sweden
来源
PROCEEDINGS 2018 13TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AUTOMATIC FACE & GESTURE RECOGNITION (FG 2018) | 2018年
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 英国惠康基金; 英国医学研究理事会; 英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
facial expressions; data-driven methods; social robots; human social perception; psychophysical methods;
D O I
10.1109/FG.2018.00072
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Social robots are now part of human society, destined for schools, hospitals, and homes to perform a variety of tasks. To engage their human users, social robots must be equipped with the essential social skill of facial expression communication. Yet, even state-of-the-art social robots are limited in this ability because they often rely on a restricted set of facial expressions derived from theory with well-known limitations such as lacking naturalistic dynamics. With no agreed methodology to objectively engineer a broader variance of more psychologically impactful facial expressions into the social robots' repertoire, human-robot interactions remain restricted. Here, we address this generic challenge with new methodologies that can reverse-engineer dynamic facial expressions into a social robot head. Our data-driven, user-centered approach, which combines human perception with psychophysical methods, produced highly recognizable and human-like dynamic facial expressions of the six classic emotions that generally outperformed state-of-art social robot facial expressions. Our data demonstrates the feasibility of our method applied to social robotics and highlights the benefits of using a data-driven approach that puts human users as central to deriving facial expressions for social robots. We also discuss future work to reverse-engineer a wider range of socially relevant facial expressions including conversational messages (e.g., interest, confusion) and personality traits (e.g., trustworthiness, attractiveness). Together, our results highlight the key role that psychology must continue to play in the design of social robots.
引用
收藏
页码:448 / 452
页数:5
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