ArXiv TLDR

Warmth and Competence in the Swarm: Designing Effective Human-Robot Teams

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2604.19270

Genki Miyauchi, Roderich Groß, Chaona Chen

cs.ROcs.HC

TLDR

Swarm behaviors significantly impact human perception of robot team warmth and competence, influencing team preference more than task performance.

Key contributions

  • Swarm behaviors consistently influence human perceptions of robot warmth and competence.
  • Longer broadcast durations increase perceived warmth in robot swarms.
  • Larger separation distances enhance perceived competence of robot teams.
  • Team preference is predicted by social perceptions (warmth/competence), not just task performance.

Why it matters

This paper highlights that social perception, specifically warmth and competence, is crucial for effective human-robot team design, even more than raw task performance. It emphasizes integrating both technical and social considerations when developing robot swarms for better collaboration.

Original Abstract

As groups of robots increasingly collaborate with humans, understanding how humans perceive them is critical for designing effective human-robot teams. While prior research examined how humans interpret and evaluate the abilities and intentions of individual agents, social perception of robot teams remains relatively underexplored. Drawing on the competence-warmth framework, we conducted two studies manipulating swarm behaviors in completing a collective search task and measured the social perception of swarm behaviors when human participants are either observers (Study 1) and operators (Study 2). Across both studies, our results show that variations in swarm behaviors consistently influenced participants' perceptions of warmth and competence. Notably, longer broadcast durations increased perceived warmth; larger separation distances increased perceived competence. Interestingly, individual robot speed had no effect on either of the perceptions. Furthermore, our results show that these social perceptions predicted participants' team preferences more strongly than task performance. Participants preferred robot teams that were both warm and competent, not those that completed tasks most quickly. These findings demonstrate that human-robot interaction dynamically shapes social perception, underscoring the importance of integrating both technical and social considerations when designing robot swarms for effective human-robot collaboration.

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