TY - JOUR AB - The paper investigates the effects of a humanoid robot's online feedback during a tutoring situation in which a human demonstrates how to make a frog jump across a table. Motivated by micro-analytic studies of adult-child-interaction, we investigated whether tutors react to a robot's gaze strategies while they are presenting an action. And if so, how they would adapt to them. Analysis reveals that tutors adjust typical "motionese" parameters (pauses, speed, and height of motion). We argue that a robot - when using adequate online feedback strategies - has at its disposal an important resource with which it could pro-actively shape the tutor's presentation and help generate the input from which it would benefit most. These results advance our understanding of robotic "Social Learning" in that they suggest to consider human and robot as one interactional learning system. DA - 2013 DO - 10.1075/is.14.2.06pit KW - conversation analysis KW - social learning KW - pro-active robot conduct KW - gaze KW - multimodality KW - feedback KW - adaptation KW - human-robot-interaction LA - eng IS - 2 M2 - 268 PY - 2013 SN - 1572-0373 SP - 268-296 T2 - Interaction Studies TI - Robot feedback shapes the tutor's presentation. How a robot's online gaze strategies lead to micro-adaptation of the human's conduct UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0070-pub-26224142 Y2 - 2024-11-22T07:11:13 ER -