Abstract
A considerable amount of research has worked toward enabling robot caregivers to perform various tasks for individuals in need of assistance. However, little, if any, research has aimed to enable robot caregivers to determine when individuals need help performing tasks. One way to develop such robots is to start with what is already known about people determining whether other people can perform a task without help. Ecological Psychologists conceptualize that task in terms of people perceiving other people’s affordances. There is an extensive and growing literature concerning the perception of others’ affordances, which has provided many important insights. Hence, our long-term goal is to develop robot caregivers that perceive people’s affordances in ways that are similar to how people perceive others’ affordances, which will require a considerable amount of research. As a first step, we have carefully reviewed the Ecological Psychology literature concerning how people perceive other people’s affordances and discuss how such knowledge might inform the design of robot caregivers. In addition, we identify areas that, if further researched, would shed additional light on how to design robot caregivers that perceive people’s affordances, and move us toward a fuller understanding of how people perceive other people’s affordances.
Acknowledgement
Opinions, findings, and conclusions are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. AFOSR.
Disclosure statement
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.