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Dimensional Approach for Using Color in Social Robot Emotion Communication

Christopher A. Thorstenson

Year
2025
Citations
2
Access
Open access

Abstract

ABSTRACT Social robots are designed to communicate and interact with humans in a socio‐emotional capacity, including the expression of emotions. Among the various ways that can be employed by robots to convey emotion information, the current study investigates color as a useful tool for emotion expression in social robots. Color is a flexible, inexpensive, and practical channel to convey emotional meaning in social robots, likely due to a robust network of color‐emotion associations existing in human cognition. The current study tests how perceptions of the emotions happiness, sadness, and anger are influenced by social robots displaying a range of colored lights. The results show that color can meaningfully influence the perceptions of these robot emotions. Further, these results show that independent color dimensions (i.e., lightness, chroma, hue) impact emotion evaluation to differing extents, depending on the particular emotion. Additionally, we tested the influence of color on emotion perception for robots that varied in their anthropomorphic appearance, finding some nuanced differences in how their appearance modified their emotion expressions. We discuss the implications with respect to designing emotion‐communicative social robots, dimensional approaches to understanding color‐emotion associations more broadly, and the role of context in color meaning. The current work aims to facilitate the design of social robots and promote more meaningful human‐robot social interactions.

Keywords

Computer scienceRobotArtificial intelligenceComputer visionPsychologyHuman–computer interactionCognitive psychology

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