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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chi, Vivienne Bihe, Rébola, Claudia B., Malle, Bertram F.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.01251
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author Chi, Vivienne Bihe
Rébola, Claudia B.
Malle, Bertram F.
author_facet Chi, Vivienne Bihe
Rébola, Claudia B.
Malle, Bertram F.
contents Older adults living alone have a number of challenges, and robots can help with some of them--by providing reminders, initiating activity, or offering comfort. As part of developing a cat robot with limited assistive functions, we designed a set of nonverbal communication signals, both auditory (cat sounds) and visual (icons on a small display). To evaluate these signals we used a mixed-methods, user-centered approach. After a pilot study, a focus group with older adults suggested revisions to the initial signal set. A large-sample online experiment then tested whether adults over the age of 65 could accurately infer the robot's communicative intentions. When both visual and auditory signals were present, accuracy was high. When visual signals were absent, accuracy often decreased; when auditory signals were absent, accuracy sometimes increased. So the auditory signals were less helpful, except when the robot conveyed strong sentiments (e.g., purring while being petted).
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_01251
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle What Does a Meow Mean? In Search of Intuitively Understandable Communication by a Nonverbal Companion Robot
Chi, Vivienne Bihe
Rébola, Claudia B.
Malle, Bertram F.
Human-Computer Interaction
Robotics
Older adults living alone have a number of challenges, and robots can help with some of them--by providing reminders, initiating activity, or offering comfort. As part of developing a cat robot with limited assistive functions, we designed a set of nonverbal communication signals, both auditory (cat sounds) and visual (icons on a small display). To evaluate these signals we used a mixed-methods, user-centered approach. After a pilot study, a focus group with older adults suggested revisions to the initial signal set. A large-sample online experiment then tested whether adults over the age of 65 could accurately infer the robot's communicative intentions. When both visual and auditory signals were present, accuracy was high. When visual signals were absent, accuracy often decreased; when auditory signals were absent, accuracy sometimes increased. So the auditory signals were less helpful, except when the robot conveyed strong sentiments (e.g., purring while being petted).
title What Does a Meow Mean? In Search of Intuitively Understandable Communication by a Nonverbal Companion Robot
topic Human-Computer Interaction
Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.01251