2017 |
A Zlatintsi, I Rodomagoulakis, V Pitsikalis, P Koutras, N Kardaris, X Papageorgiou, C Tzafestas, P Maragos Social Human-Robot Interaction for the Elderly: Two Real-life Use Cases, Conference ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), Vienna, Austria, 2017. Abstract | BibTeX | Links: [PDF] @conference{ZRP+17, title = {Social Human-Robot Interaction for the Elderly: Two Real-life Use Cases,}, author = {A Zlatintsi and I Rodomagoulakis and V Pitsikalis and P Koutras and N Kardaris and X Papageorgiou and C Tzafestas and P Maragos}, url = {http://robotics.ntua.gr/wp-content/publications/Zlatintsi+_SocialHRIforTheElderly_HRI-17.pdf}, year = {2017}, date = {2017-03-01}, booktitle = {ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI)}, address = {Vienna, Austria}, abstract = {We explore new aspects on assistive living via smart social human-robot interaction (HRI) involving automatic recognition of multimodal gestures and speech in a natural interface, providing social features in HRI. We discuss a whole framework of resources, including datasets and tools, briefly shown in two real-life use cases for elderly subjects: a multimodal interface of an assistive robotic rollator and an assistive bathing robot. We discuss these domain specific tasks, and open source tools, which can be used to build such HRI systems, as well as indicative results. Sharing such resources can open new perspectives in assistive HRI.}, keywords = {}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {conference} } We explore new aspects on assistive living via smart social human-robot interaction (HRI) involving automatic recognition of multimodal gestures and speech in a natural interface, providing social features in HRI. We discuss a whole framework of resources, including datasets and tools, briefly shown in two real-life use cases for elderly subjects: a multimodal interface of an assistive robotic rollator and an assistive bathing robot. We discuss these domain specific tasks, and open source tools, which can be used to build such HRI systems, as well as indicative results. Sharing such resources can open new perspectives in assistive HRI. |
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