Laughing at the robot: Three types of laughables when interacting with Pepper
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Laughing at the robot : Three types of laughables when interacting with Pepper. / Due, Brian Lystgaard.
Interacting with Robots and Social Agents. Peter Lang, 2023.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Laughing at the robot
T2 - Three types of laughables when interacting with Pepper
AU - Due, Brian Lystgaard
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Sometimes people laugh when interacting with social robots. Why? What are the laughable source and the sequential organization? What does the laugh reveal about Human-Robot-Interaction? This chapter is based on multimodal conversation analysis of video data from a setting in which participants naturally interact with the humanoid robot Pepper in a Danish institutional context. The chapter explores three variations of laughables: 1) laughs in response to conversational misfit; 2) laughs in response to script misfit; and 3) laughs in response to joke-telling. The chapter unpacks the basic sequential structure across these types. It discusses how laughs are produced as a consequence of the type of social setting in which bystanders are engaged in the participation framework. The chapter contributes to new understandings about how social robots should be able to engage in laugh sequences.
AB - Sometimes people laugh when interacting with social robots. Why? What are the laughable source and the sequential organization? What does the laugh reveal about Human-Robot-Interaction? This chapter is based on multimodal conversation analysis of video data from a setting in which participants naturally interact with the humanoid robot Pepper in a Danish institutional context. The chapter explores three variations of laughables: 1) laughs in response to conversational misfit; 2) laughs in response to script misfit; and 3) laughs in response to joke-telling. The chapter unpacks the basic sequential structure across these types. It discusses how laughs are produced as a consequence of the type of social setting in which bystanders are engaged in the participation framework. The chapter contributes to new understandings about how social robots should be able to engage in laugh sequences.
M3 - Book chapter
BT - Interacting with Robots and Social Agents
PB - Peter Lang
ER -
ID: 315981329