A pilot study to understand requirements of a shopping mall robot

  • Authors:
  • Chandan Datta;Anuj Kapuria;Ritukar Vijay

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand;Hitech Robotic Systemz Ltd, Gurgaon, India;Hitech Robotic Systemz Ltd, Gurgaon, India

  • Venue:
  • Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Human-robot interaction
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

As part of our long term research interests in examining the technological requirements for a shopping mall robot, we performed a short pilot study during the Christmas holidays to identify the social interaction dynamics for Neel, a wheeled mobile robot which interacts using its on-site and online presence. During the pilot study we found that a range of the robot's interaction capabilities were mostly unused due to the relatively short interactions users had with the robot to fulfill their informational requirements like the movie show-times or apparel deals. Since, its challenging to educate and inform a diverse mass of users about the robot's functionality, we decided to divide the research roadmap in stages where in the first stage the users would learn the value of the robot's capabilities by the repeated short-time interactions and over the long term more users would register for the robot's services. Hence, identifying the temporal and episodic characteristics of the interactions are perceived important to match the expectations and privacy concerns of the users. We also identified that while non-interactively delivering shopping related information through a web application is relatively easier, doing it actively through the robot can be probed as advertisements very easily by human participants and negate the user experience we try to deliver. We report some key technological advances we made through our field trial and set forth the goals.