Pitsch, Karola; Koch, Benjamin:
How infants perceive the toy robot Pleo : an exploratory case study on infant-robot-interaction
In: Proceedings of the ASME International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference 2010 : presented at 2010 ASME International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference - 2010 ASME International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference, August 15-18, 2010, Montreal, Québec, Canada - New York: ASME, 2010, S. 80 - 87
2010Buchaufsatz/Kapitel in Tagungsband
KommunikationswissenschaftFakultät für Geisteswissenschaften » Institut für Kommunikationswissenschaft
Titel:
How infants perceive the toy robot Pleo : an exploratory case study on infant-robot-interaction
Autor*in:
Pitsch, KarolaUDE
GND
1202996779
LSF ID
56703
ORCID
0000-0002-6458-7264ORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
;
Koch, Benjamin
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch

Abstract:

In order to develop robot systems that can interact with untrained, na"ıve human users, it is important to understand how people ash from different age groups ash perceive a given robot system and which features might be relevant for this. While existing studies generally use questionnaires/interviews and/or coding schemes rendering either abstract categories or single features of individual behaviour towards a robot, we suggest to use a different methodological approach: to use the concepts and methodological tools from Conversation Analysis (EM/CA). Investigating video data from a study in which users ash here: infants 3 to 8 years old ash play with the toy robot Pleo, we show that and how (1) a user’s perception, categorization and re-interpretation of a robot system emerges step by step during and from the interaction with the system, and (2) how the users’ attempts to establish coordinated ‘sequences of action’ play a central role in this. The results of our exploratory case analysis are discussed in the light of studies suggesting that, in infants, robotic pets seem to blur foundational ontological categories, such as animate vs. inanimate.