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This book offers the first comprehensive yet critical overview of
methods used to evaluate interaction between humans and social
robots. It reviews commonly used evaluation methods, and shows that
they are not always suitable for this purpose. Using representative
case studies, the book identifies good and bad practices for
evaluating human-robot interactions and proposes new standardized
processes as well as recommendations, carefully developed on the
basis of intensive discussions between specialists in various
HRI-related disciplines, e.g. psychology, ethology, ergonomics,
sociology, ethnography, robotics, and computer science. The book is
the result of a close, long-standing collaboration between the
editors and the invited contributors, including, but not limited
to, their inspiring discussions at the workshop on Evaluation
Methods Standardization for Human-Robot Interaction (EMSHRI), which
have been organized yearly since 2015. By highlighting and weighing
good and bad practices in evaluation design for HRI, the book will
stimulate the scientific community to search for better solutions,
take advantages of interdisciplinary collaborations, and encourage
the development of new standards to accommodate the growing
presence of robots in the day-to-day and social lives of human
beings.
This book offers the first comprehensive yet critical overview of
methods used to evaluate interaction between humans and social
robots. It reviews commonly used evaluation methods, and shows that
they are not always suitable for this purpose. Using representative
case studies, the book identifies good and bad practices for
evaluating human-robot interactions and proposes new standardized
processes as well as recommendations, carefully developed on the
basis of intensive discussions between specialists in various
HRI-related disciplines, e.g. psychology, ethology, ergonomics,
sociology, ethnography, robotics, and computer science. The book is
the result of a close, long-standing collaboration between the
editors and the invited contributors, including, but not limited
to, their inspiring discussions at the workshop on Evaluation
Methods Standardization for Human-Robot Interaction (EMSHRI), which
have been organized yearly since 2015. By highlighting and weighing
good and bad practices in evaluation design for HRI, the book will
stimulate the scientific community to search for better solutions,
take advantages of interdisciplinary collaborations, and encourage
the development of new standards to accommodate the growing
presence of robots in the day-to-day and social lives of human
beings.
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