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SensHRPS: Sensing Comfortable Human-Robot Proxemics and Personal Space With Eye-Tracking

Nadezhda Kushina
Ko Watanabe
Aarthi Kannan
Ashita Ashok
Andreas Dengel
Karsten Berns
Main:3 Pages
6 Figures
Bibliography:3 Pages
4 Tables
Appendix:1 Pages
Abstract

Social robots must adjust to human proxemic norms to ensure user comfort and engagement. While prior research demonstrates that eye-tracking features reliably estimate comfort in human-human interactions, their applicability to interactions with humanoid robots remains unexplored. In this study, we investigate user comfort with the robot "Ameca" across four experimentally controlled distances (0.5 m to 2.0 m) using mobile eye-tracking and subjective reporting (N=19). We evaluate multiple machine learning and deep learning models to estimate comfort based on gaze features. Contrary to previous human-human studies where Transformer models excelled, a Decision Tree classifier achieved the highest performance (F1-score = 0.73), with minimum pupil diameter identified as the most critical predictor. These findings suggest that physiological comfort thresholds in human-robot interaction differ from human-human dynamics and can be effectively modeled using interpretable logic.

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