Disney experiments look to make kid-robot interactions more natural

#artificialintelligence 

Sooner or later, our children will be raised by robots, so it's natural that Disney, purveyor of both robots and child-related goods, would want to get ahead of that trend. The three studies were executed at once as a whole, with each part documented separately in papers posted today. The kids in the study (about 80 of them) proceeded through a series of short activities generally associated with storytelling and spoken interaction, their progress carefully recorded by the experimenters. First they were introduced (individually as they took part in the experiment, naturally) to a robot named Piper, which was controlled remotely ("wizarded") by a puppeteer in another room, but had a set of recorded responses it drew from for different experimental conditions. The idea is that the robot should use what it knows to inform what it says and how it says it, but it's not clear quite how that should work, especially with kids.

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