Maren Bennewitz, Felix Faber, Dominik Joho, Michael Schreiber, Sven Behnke
Enabling a Humanoid Robot to Interact with Multiple Persons
Abstract.
Showing attentiveness to people is an essential capability for a robot designed to
interact with humans. Involving several persons into an interaction requires that the robot
knows where the persons are relatively to its current location. Therefore, we propose an
approach that maintains a probabilistic belief about people in the surroundings of the robot
which is updated based on sensory information. Using this belief the robot is able to memorize
people even if they are currently outside its limited field of view. Furthermore, we use a
technique to localize a speaker in the environment. In this way, even people who are currently
not stored in the belief of the robot can attract its attention. As we show in practical
experiments, our humanoid robot is able to shift its attention between different persons. Even
people who are not the primary conversational partner are included into the interaction.
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BibTeX
@InProceedings{bennewitz05darh, author = {Maren Bennewitz and Felix Faber and Dominik Joho and Michael Schreiber and Sven Behnke}, title = {Enabling a Humanoid Robot to Interact with Multiple Persons}, year = {2005}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on Dextrous Autonomous Robots and Humanoids {(DARH)}}, address = {Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland} }