Exploring behaviours percieved as important to the human-dog bond and their translation to a robotic platform

Katie A. Riddoch, Roxanne D. Hawkins, Emily S. Cross

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract / Description of output

To facilitate long-term engagement with social robots, robots can be modelled on ‘successful’ social animals –specifically, pet dogs. Unfortunately, scientific understanding is limited to qualities of dogs that are ‘liked’, opposed to behaviours that facilitate and maintain the human-dog bond. To better understand dog behaviours that are important for building bonds between owner and pet, we collected open-ended responses from dog owners (n=153). Thematic analysis identified 7 behaviour categories: the importance of 1) attunement, 2) communication, 3) consistency and predict-ability, 4) physical affection, 5) positivity and enthusiasm, 6) proximity, and 7) shared activities. We consider the feasibility of translating dog behaviours into a robotic platform, and potential barriers moving forward. In addition to providing insight into important behaviours for human-dog bonding, this work provides a springboard for those hoping to implement dog behaviours into animal-like agents, avatars, and robots.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationUKRAS21 Conference
Subtitle of host publicationRobotics at home Proceedings
PublisherUK Robotics and Autonomous Systems
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Jun 2021

Publication series

NameJournal of Robotics and Autonomous Systems
PublisherUK Robotics and Autonomous Systems
ISSN (Electronic)2516-502X

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • dog behaviour
  • social robots
  • biomimetics
  • human-animal interaction
  • HRI
  • HAI

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