Me-Bot
The MeBot is a semi-autonomous robotic avatar that gives a person a richer way to interact remotely with an audience than is allowed with phone and video conferencing. The robot was designed with an emphasis on being able to convey the non-verbal channels of social communication. That is, it is able to communicate some body posture, a wide range of head movement and very expressive hand gestures. It takes advantage of the current advanced technology in wireless communications and the ever-expanding capabilities of mobile devices. MeBot is a push toward a future where remote presence can be achieved easily in a way that saves traveling time but still achieves the same experience as “being there”.
We conducted an experiment that evaluated how people perceived a robot-mediated operator differently when they used (1) just a screen, (2) a static telerobot or (3) a physically embodied and expressive telerobot. Results showed that people felt more psychologically involved and more engaged in the interaction with their remote partners when they were embodied in a socially expressive way. People also reported much higher levels of cooperation both on their own part and their partners as well as a higher score for enjoyment in the interaction. Finally, partners engaging in a collaborative task with the expressive robot reported higher levels of psychological involvement, including empathy
Publications
- Adalgeirsson, Sigurdur O., and Cynthia Breazeal. “Mebot: a robotic platform for socially embodied presence.” Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IEEE international conference on Human-robot interaction. IEEE Press, 2010. *Best Paper Nomination*
- Adalgeirsson, Sigurdur O. “MeBot: A robotic platform for socially embodied telepresence” S.M. Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2009.