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NASHVILLE, Tenn., Dec. 16 (AScribe Newswire)
-- Forget the robot child in the movie "AI."
Vanderbilt researchers Nilanjan Sarkar and Craig
Smith have a less romantic but more practical
idea in mind. "We are not trying to give a robot
emotions. We are trying to make robots that are
sensitive to our emotions," says Smith,
associate professor of psychology and human
development. Their vision, which is to create a
kind of robot Friday, a personal assistant who
can accurately sense the moods of its human
bosses and respond appropriately, is described
in the article, "Online Stress Detection using
Psychophysiological Signals for Implicit
Human-Robot Cooperation." The article, which
appears in the Dec. issue of the journal
Robotica, also reports the initial steps that
they have taken to make their vision a reality.
"Psychological research shows that a lot of
our communications, human to human, are
implicit," says Sarkar, an assistant professor
in mechanical engineering. "The better we know
the other person the better we get at
understanding the psychological state of that
person. So the prime motivation of our research
is to determine whether a robot can sense the
psychological state of a human person. Sooner or
later, robots will be everywhere. As they become
increasingly common, they will need to interact
with humans in a more natural fashion." When
Sarkar first approached him about collaborating
on the project, Smith admits that he was very
skeptical. "I expected to listen and then
explain to him why his ideas would never work."
But the engineer surprised him on two counts:
the amount he knew about the psychophysiology of
emotions and his realization that any system for
detecting emotions cannot be universal, but must
be based on individual patterns.
The project has two basic parts, and both are
ambitious. One is to develop a system that can
accurately detect a person's psychological state
by analyzing the output of a variety of
physiological sensors. The other is to process
this information in real time (as it happens)
and convert it into a form that a computer or
robot can process.
"Psychologists have been trying to identify
universal patterns of physiological response
since the turn of the century without success.
All this effort has shown is that there are no
such universal patterns," says Smith. "The hard
fact is that different individuals express the
same emotion rather differently. But I think
that we have established the feasibility of the
individual-specific approach that we are taking
and there is a good chance that we can succeed,"
says Smith.
The Vanderbilt researchers are using an
approach similar to that adopted by voice and
handwriting recognition systems. They are
gathering baseline information about each person
and analyzing it to identify the responses
associated with different mental states.
One advantage that the researchers have is
the recent advances in sensor technology.
"Extremely small, 'wearable' sensors have been
developed that are quite comfortable and are
fast enough for real-time applications," says
Sarkar.
Their first experiments concentrated on
detecting high and low anxiety levels using a
heart rate monitor. "There are sophisticated
medical diagnostic techniques that can detect
stress in a patient," they acknowledge in their
Robotica paper, but add, "All those techniques
are slow, expensive and, more importantly, not
suitable for a person who is moving and
working."
In this case the researchers used playing
video games to put subjects under pressure and
induce stress. By varying the level of
difficulty of the games, they were able to vary
the level of stress involved. They obtained
electrocardiogram data from several video-gaming
playing subjects over a six-month period.
Sarkar and his research team used advanced
signal processing techniques, including wavelet
analysis and fuzzy logic, to analyze the
heart-rate data. They looked specifically at
variations in the interval between heartbeats, a
common measure of heart rate variability. They
identified two frequency bands that vary
predictably with changes in stress levels. These
bands are associated with the parasympathetic
and sympathetic divisions of the autonomic
nervous system. The parasympathetic system
reduces heart rate and tends to control heart
rate under most normal conditions. The
sympathetic system responds to fear and
excitement and tends to increase heart rate
during emergency situations.
"In all the experiments we conducted, we
found that, when a subject became stressed, the
level of sympathetic activity increased and
level of parasympathetic activity decreased,"
Sarkar says. He and his research team have since
supplemented their measures of heart rate with
measures of skin conductance (affected by
variations hand sweating) and facial muscle
activity (brow furrowing and jaw clenching).
They were able to combine this information to
produce a series of rules that allow a robot to
respond to information about a person's
emotional state. They have used these to program
a small mobile robot. The robot is initially
given a task of exploring the room. So it begins
moving randomly about on the floor. Then
physiological data of a person experiencing high
anxiety levels is sent to a processor that
detects the anxiety level and instructs the
mobile robot to move to a specific location and
say, "I sense that you are anxious. Is there
anything I can do to help?"
In order to investigate additional
psychological states, Smith has created three
simple tasks - anagram, sound discrimination and
math problems that systematically increase
difficulty - that are designed specifically to
make the performer frustrated or bored. They
will be adding additional sensors, such as
electroencephalogram (EEG) brain wave monitors
and additional measures of cardiovascular
activity. The next challenge that the
researchers face is finding a way to
discriminate between high levels of anxiety and
engagement. These two states are accompanied by
physiological responses that are much closer to
each other than either of them are to low levels
of anxiety or engagement. "This is the really
big one," says Smith.
The research is supported by grants from the
National Science Foundation, the NASA Institute
for Advanced Concepts and Vanderbilt University.
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