Visible to the public Human Trust in Robots When Performing a Service

TitleHuman Trust in Robots When Performing a Service
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsByrne, K., Marín, C.
Conference Name2018 IEEE 27th International Conference on Enabling Technologies: Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises (WETICE)
Date PublishedJune 2018
PublisherIEEE
ISBN Number978-1-5386-6916-7
KeywordsCollaboration, Conferences, Framework, Human Behavior, human factors, human participants, human perceptions, human robot interaction, human-robot interaction, mobile computing, multi-robot systems, pubcrawl, Radio frequency, resilience, Resiliency, Robot teams, Robot Trust, robotic personal assistants, robust trust, smart phones, team working, Trust, trust robots
Abstract

The presence of robots is becoming more apparent as technology progresses and the market focus transitions from smart phones to robotic personal assistants such as those provided by Amazon and Google. The integration of robots in our societies is an inevitable tendency in which robots in many forms and with many functionalities will provide services to humans. This calls for an understanding of how humans are affected by both the presence of and the reliance on robots to perform services for them. In this paper we explore the effects that robots have on humans when a service is performed on request. We expose three groups of human participants to three levels of service completion performed by robots. We record and analyse human perceptions such as propensity to trust, competency, responsiveness, sociability, and team work ability. Our results demonstrate that humans tend to trust robots and are more willing to interact with them when they autonomously recover from failure by requesting help from other robots to fulfil their service. This supports the view that autonomy and team working capabilities must be brought into robots in an effort to strengthen trust in robots performing a service.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8495899
DOI10.1109/WETICE.2018.00009
Citation Keybyrne_human_2018