Motivating Physical Activity via Competitive Human-Robot Interaction

Yang, Boling, Habibi, Golnaz, Lancaster, Patrick E., Boots, Byron, Smith, Joshua R.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

Competition is ubiquitous in the natural world [1, 2] and in human society [3, 4, 5]. Despite its universality, competitive interaction has rarely been investigated in the field of Human Robot Interaction, which has mainly focused on cooperative interactions such as collaborative manipulation, mobility assistance, feeding, and so on [6, 7, 8, 9, 10]. In some ways it is not surprising that competitive interaction has been overlooked: of course everyone wants a robot that can assist them; who would want a robot that thwarts their intentions? Yet, we also accept that human-human competition can be healthy and productive, for example in structured contexts such as sports. In this paper we explore the idea that human-robot competition can provide similar benefits. We believe that physical exercise settings such as athletic practice, fitness training, and physical therapy are scenarios in which competitive HRI can benefit users.