A Soft Robotic Interface for Chick-Robot Affective Interactions
Jue Chen, Alexander Mielke, Kaspar Althoefer, Elisabetta Versace
TLDR
A soft robotic interface with warmth and visual cues fosters affective interactions and acceptance in newly hatched chicks.
Key contributions
- Developed a soft robotic interface for chicks providing warmth, breathing-like deformation, and face-like visuals.
- Chicks demonstrated acceptance, spontaneously approaching and spending increasing time near the soft robot.
- Chicks strongly preferred warmth and face-like visual cues, while breathing cues were neutral.
- Establishes a reliable evaluation protocol for designing multimodal robotic devices for animal welfare.
Why it matters
This research provides a safe baseline and evaluation protocol for designing robots for animal welfare and neuroscientific studies. It shows that specific soft, thermal, and visual stimuli can sustain early animal-robot interactions, paving the way for more effective animal-robot interfaces.
Original Abstract
The potential of Animal-Robot Interaction (ARI) in welfare applications depends on how much an animal perceives a robotic agent as socially relevant, non-threatening and potentially attractive (acceptance). Here, we present an animal-centered soft robotic affective interface for newly hatched chicks (Gallus gallus). The soft interface provides safe and controllable cues, including warmth, breathing-like rhythmic deformation, and face-like visual stimuli. We evaluated chick acceptance of the interface and chick-robot interactions by measuring spontaneous approach and touch responses during video tracking. Overall, chicks approached and spent increasing time on or near the interface, demonstrating acceptance of the device. Across different layouts, chicks showed strong preference for warm thermal stimulation, which increased over time. Face-like visual cues elicited a swift and stable preference, speeding up the initial approach to the tactile interface. Although the breathing cue did not elicit any preference, neither did it trigger avoidance, paving the way for further exploration. These findings translate affective interface concepts to ARI, demonstrating that appropriate soft, thermal and visual stimuli can sustain early chick-robot interactions. This work establishes a reliable evaluation protocol and a safe baseline for designing multimodal robotic devices for animal welfare and neuroscientific research.
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