Projects

Project Description

The work described below is affiliated with the R-House Human-Robot Interaction Lab, which is a collaborative research group and space that brings together faculty, research staff, and students who study human-robot interaction (HRI). HRI is a field that explores how people perceive, respond to, and interact with robots, and how to better design robots so they can be used in everyday contexts, such as the home, work, education, or healthcare. If you are interested in such topics, we invite you to join us in our studies on how people perceive, make sense of, and use robots in their daily lives. We are currently working on several projects relating to social robot design and evaluation that Emerging Scholars can contribute to, based on their own research goals and interests. If you participate in research with us, we will work to assign you to a project based on your interests and the skills you hope to develop. In one project, we are working on exploring design concepts for a social robot that that can interact with and manage the social dynamics of a small group of children, or an intergenerational pair. In a second, we are working with people living with dementia and their caregivers to develop a conversational robot system that can gauge shifts in their cognitive status and provide relevant cognitive exercises. In a third project, we are exploring how a socially assistive robot could provide privacy preserving feedback to older adults as they use the internet. Finally, a fourth project explores how certain design features of embodied conversational assistants can affect people's trust of such systems. Overall, we are very interested in how robots can help mediate interactions between people of diverse ages, cognitive and physical abilities, and from diverse cultures to promote their and overall societal well being. Our lab is committed to using research and technology to help empower users, so many of our projects involve co-design activities with participants, as well as observation, interviews, and in-lab user studies. Research activities for undergraduates on these projects include learning how to work with, program and control robots, recruiting and scheduling participants, running participants for studies in and outside the lab, going to relevant field sites with robots to observe human-robot interaction, collecting and managing textual, audio, and video data, discussing study design, results, and implications, attending regular lab meetings, and working closely with other faculty and students engaged in the project. There is a possibility for participating students to continue working with the group following the Emerging Scholars program through other funding sources.

Technology or Computational Component

Our research investigates the connection between robots, as embodied computing technologies, and people. While working on the project, students will become familiar with interactive robotic technologies, study how different aspects of robot design affect people's perceptions of and reactions to robots, work on controlling and programming robots, and help us develop design recommendations for future robotic technologies. We will also discuss the potential societal implications of the robotic technologies we are developing, and how we can empower participants in our studies through different research methodologies.