Humans and robots are increasingly working together in human-robot teams. Teamwork requires communication, especially when interdependence between team members is high. In previous work, we identified a conceptual difference between sharing what you are doing (i.e., being transparent) and why you are doing it (i.e., being explainable). Although the second might sound better, it is important to avoid information overload. Therefore, an online experiment (n = 72) was conducted to study the effect of communication style of a robot (silent, transparent, explainable, or adaptive based on time pressure and relevancy) on human-robot teamwork. We examined the effects of these communication styles on trust in the robot, workload during the task, sit...
Trust is the foundation of successful human collaboration. This has also been found to be true for h...
The paper discusses how a human-robot team can remain “co-hesive ” while performing under stress. By...
As robots become more ubiquitous, they will increasingly need to behave as our team partners and smo...
Humans and robots are increasingly working together in human-robot teams. Teamwork requires communic...
Humans and robots are increasingly working together in human-robot teams. Teamwork requires communic...
Increasingly autonomous robotic systems are expected to play a vital role in aiding humans in comple...
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) seeks understanding, designing, and evaluating of robots for human-rob...
We examine the effects of transparency and communication modality on user trust in a human-robot int...
Typically, humans interact with a humanoid robot with apprehension. This lack of trust can seriously...
International audienceThis paper deals with how a human operator follows a request made by a robot i...
Abstract — Nonverbal communication plays an important role in coordinating teammates ’ actions for c...
Becoming a well-functioning team requires continuous collaborative learning by all team members. Thi...
In order to test how explanations affect a user working together with a collaborative robot, we crea...
In anticipation of the complex, dynamic battlefields of the future, military operations are increasi...
We often assume that robots which collaborate with humans should behave in ways that are transparent...
Trust is the foundation of successful human collaboration. This has also been found to be true for h...
The paper discusses how a human-robot team can remain “co-hesive ” while performing under stress. By...
As robots become more ubiquitous, they will increasingly need to behave as our team partners and smo...
Humans and robots are increasingly working together in human-robot teams. Teamwork requires communic...
Humans and robots are increasingly working together in human-robot teams. Teamwork requires communic...
Increasingly autonomous robotic systems are expected to play a vital role in aiding humans in comple...
Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) seeks understanding, designing, and evaluating of robots for human-rob...
We examine the effects of transparency and communication modality on user trust in a human-robot int...
Typically, humans interact with a humanoid robot with apprehension. This lack of trust can seriously...
International audienceThis paper deals with how a human operator follows a request made by a robot i...
Abstract — Nonverbal communication plays an important role in coordinating teammates ’ actions for c...
Becoming a well-functioning team requires continuous collaborative learning by all team members. Thi...
In order to test how explanations affect a user working together with a collaborative robot, we crea...
In anticipation of the complex, dynamic battlefields of the future, military operations are increasi...
We often assume that robots which collaborate with humans should behave in ways that are transparent...
Trust is the foundation of successful human collaboration. This has also been found to be true for h...
The paper discusses how a human-robot team can remain “co-hesive ” while performing under stress. By...
As robots become more ubiquitous, they will increasingly need to behave as our team partners and smo...