The spread of cobots working side-by-side to humans has recently drawn attention to the psychological aspects of human-robot interaction. We propose an exploratory study that investigates whether and how the role taken on by the robot during a collaborative task influences the human’s psychophysiological response and production rate. We assume the cobot can either take the lead with respect to the human operator or comply with the partner’s decision; namely, being the leader or the follower within the dyad. Against this background, we examined the effects of the leader-follower paradigm on a collaborative tower-building task. We evaluated the stress induced on the subject by the cooperation with the robot, based on both the ECG measurements and on PANAS and STAI questionnaires. Moreover, based on the measured cycle-time, we estimated the user’s production rate. The results highlighted that when the human takes the lead, he/she is subject to a lower physiological stress and is less productive compared to the case where he/she follows the robot strategy
Messeri, C., Maria Zanchettin, A., Rocco, P., Gianotti, E., Chirico, A., Magoni, S., Gaggioli, A., On the effects of leader-follower roles in dyadic human-robot synchronisation, <<IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COGNITIVE AND DEVELOPMENTAL SYSTEMS>>, N/A; 15 (2): 434-443. [doi:10.1109/TCDS.2020.2991864] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/153859]
On the effects of leader-follower roles in dyadic human-robot synchronisation
Chirico, Alice;Gaggioli, Andrea
2023
Abstract
The spread of cobots working side-by-side to humans has recently drawn attention to the psychological aspects of human-robot interaction. We propose an exploratory study that investigates whether and how the role taken on by the robot during a collaborative task influences the human’s psychophysiological response and production rate. We assume the cobot can either take the lead with respect to the human operator or comply with the partner’s decision; namely, being the leader or the follower within the dyad. Against this background, we examined the effects of the leader-follower paradigm on a collaborative tower-building task. We evaluated the stress induced on the subject by the cooperation with the robot, based on both the ECG measurements and on PANAS and STAI questionnaires. Moreover, based on the measured cycle-time, we estimated the user’s production rate. The results highlighted that when the human takes the lead, he/she is subject to a lower physiological stress and is less productive compared to the case where he/she follows the robot strategyI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.