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Breathe with Me: Synchronizing Biosignals for User Embodiment in Robots

Iddo Yehoshua Wald
Amber Maimon
Shiyao Zhang
Dennis Küster
Robert Porzel
Tanja Schultz
Rainer Malaka
Main:7 Pages
4 Figures
Bibliography:2 Pages
Abstract

Embodiment of users within robotic systems has been explored in human-robot interaction, most often in telepresence and teleoperation. In these applications, synchronized visuomotor feedback can evoke a sense of body ownership and agency, contributing to the experience of embodiment. We extend this work by employing embreathment, the representation of the user's own breath in real time, as a means for enhancing user embodiment experience in robots. In a within-subjects experiment, participants controlled a robotic arm, while its movements were either synchronized or non-synchronized with their own breath. Synchrony was shown to significantly increase body ownership, and was preferred by most participants. We propose the representation of physiological signals as a novel interoceptive pathway for human-robot interaction, and discuss implications for telepresence, prosthetics, collaboration with robots, and shared autonomy.

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