Abstract:In this study, we examined scene selection methods and emotion-based descriptions for a robot's daily diary. We proposed a scene selection method and an emotion description method that take into account semantic and affective information, and created several types of diaries. Experiments were conducted to examine the change in sentiment values and preference of each diary, and it was found that the robot's feelings and impressions changed more from date to date when scenes were selected using the affective captions. Furthermore, we found that the robot's emotion generally improves the preference of the robot's diary regardless of the scene it describes. However, presenting negative or mixed emotions at once may decrease the preference of the diary or reduce the robot's robot-likeness, and thus the method of presenting emotions still needs further investigation.
Abstract:In this study, we propose an automatic diary generation system that uses information from past joint experiences with the aim of increasing the favorability for robots through shared experiences between humans and robots. For the verbalization of the robot's memory, the system applies a large-scale language model, which is a rapidly developing field. Since this model does not have memories of experiences, it generates a diary by receiving information from joint experiences. As an experiment, a robot and a human went for a walk and generated a diary with interaction and dialogue history. The proposed diary achieved high scores in comfort and performance in the evaluation of the robot's impression. In the survey of diaries giving more favorable impressions, diaries with information on joint experiences were selected higher than diaries without such information, because diaries with information on joint experiences showed more cooperation between the robot and the human and more intimacy from the robot.