Probing Aesthetics Strategies for Robot Sound: Complexity and Materiality in Movement Sonification

Author:

Latupeirissa Adrian B.1ORCID,Panariello Claudio1ORCID,Bresin Roberto1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

Abstract

This article presents three studies where we probe aesthetics strategies of sound produced by movement sonification of a Pepper robot by mapping its movements to sound models. We developed two sets of sound models. The first set was made by two sound models, a sawtooth-based one and another based on feedback chains, for investigating how the perception of synthesized robot sounds would depend on their design complexity. We implemented the second set of sound models for probing the “materiality” of sound made by a robot in motion. This set consisted of a sound synthesis based on an engine highlighting the robot’s internal mechanisms, a metallic sound synthesis highlighting the robot’s typical appearance, and a whoosh sound synthesis highlighting the movement. We conducted three studies. The first study explores how the first set of sound models can influence the perception of expressive gestures of a Pepper robot through an online survey. In the second study, we carried out an experiment in a museum installation with a Pepper robot presented in two scenarios: (1) while welcoming patrons into a restaurant and (2) while providing information to visitors in a shopping center. Finally, in the third study, we conducted an online survey with stimuli similar to those used in the second study. Our findings suggest that participants preferred more complex sound models for the sonification of robot movements. Concerning the materiality, participants liked better subtle sounds that blend well with the ambient sound (i.e., less distracting) and soundscapes in which sound sources can be identified. Also, sound preferences varied depending on the context in which participants experienced the robot-generated sounds (e.g., as a live museum installation vs. an online display).

Funder

Swedish Research Council

NordForsks Nordic University Hub “Nordic Sound and Music Computing Network—Nordic SMC”

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Human-Computer Interaction

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1. Introduction to the special issue on design and perception of interactive sonification;Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces;2023-11-02

2. PepperOSC: enabling interactive sonification of a robot’s expressive movement;Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces;2023-09-09

3. Hearing it Out: Guiding Robot Sound Design through Design Thinking;2023 32nd IEEE International Conference on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN);2023-08-28

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