The 4th Workshop on Public Space Human-Robot Interaction (PubRob 2018)

MobileHRI: Mobile human-robot interaction

Held as part of the International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services (MobileHCI 2018)
Barcelona, Spain
3 September 2018 

Workshop overview

This workshop aims to bring together researchers from Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) and mobile HCI to explore issues of mutual interest and act as a bridge between the two communities.

The development of robots capable of interacting with humans has made tremendous progress in the last decade, leading to an expectation that in the near future, robots will be increasingly deployed in public spaces. In these settings, robots must often deal with situations that require socially appropriate human-robot interactions of a specific nature: interactions that are short and dynamic, and where the robot has to be able to deal with multiple persons at once. In order to do so, robots typically require specific skills, including robust video and audio processing, fast reasoning and decision making mechanisms, and natural and safe output path planning algorithms. Mobility is also a key requirement in many of these systems and research in this area shares a number of challenges with the mobile HCI community, including the development of systems and infrastructures for mobile devices, and methods for studying human-robot interactions outside the lab. Issues related to the management of battery life, dynamically-changing conditions like lighting, and background noise must also be addressed. As a result, research on public space robots is often fundamentally different from other work in social robotics and HRI/HCI, but presents opportunities for cross-fertilisation between the HRI and mobile HCI communities.

This workshop is the fifth in a series of meetings (and the fourth workshop) organised around the theme of public space human-robot interaction.

Invited speakers

Astrid Weiss, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Francesco Ferro, PAL Robotics, Barcelona, Spain

Papers and slides

Organisers

Mary Ellen Foster, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
Manuel Giuliani, Bristol Robotics Lab, Austria
Ron Petrick, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom