Changes for page b. Test
Last modified by Demi Breen on 2023/04/09 15:10
From version 26.1
edited by Hugo van Dijk
on 2023/03/30 15:16
on 2023/03/30 15:16
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To version 27.1
edited by Hugo van Dijk
on 2023/03/30 18:30
on 2023/03/30 18:30
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
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... ... @@ -115,11 +115,24 @@ 115 115 116 116 Even though the mean rejections were higher for emotion-based (0,875) than for goal-based(0,125). This difference was not significant. 117 117 118 -Furthermore, there was no significant difference in questionnaire answers between the two groups. 118 +Furthermore, there was no significant difference in any of the questionnaire answers between the two groups. 119 119 120 -Th etablebelowshows the p-value per measure.120 +[[This table>>doc:.p-values.WebHome]] shows the p-value per measure. 121 121 122 122 123 +When asked the reason that convinced the participant to join the robot on a walk, two out of the six participants that said yes eventually in the emotion-based system recited one of the persuasion subjects. For the goal-based system, this was three out of eight. 124 + 125 +When participants were standing too close to the robot, it wouldn't walk. This happened in numerous times, resulting in conversation without walking. 126 + 127 +General remarks made by participants evaluating the emotion-based system were only about the walking aspect of the robot, stating that the walking distance should be increased and the change in direction was quite sharp. Participants doing the goal-based evaluation commented on the lacking speech recognition system and stated that it might be useful to start with asking how the participant feels. 128 + 129 +Even though it was specified at the start of every session that the participant can say either yes or no to the robot's persuasion attempts, we noticed that some participants did not seem to grasp the fact that they could say no. At the end of their session, one participant stated that he was not persuaded by the robot at all, even though they said yes on the robot's first persuasion attempt. 130 +\\Another participant, who said no to all persuasion attempts, stated afterwards that they "Just wanted to see what would happen if I said no all the time". 131 + 132 +As the robot's speech recognition could only understand single words due to its implementation, this resulted in numerous occasions where a participant was not understood and had to repeat themselves. It also occurred that the robot understood 'yes' when 'no' was said. 133 + 134 + 135 + 123 123 = 4. Discussion = 124 124 125 125