Framing Effects on Privacy Concerns about a Home Telepresence Robot

Published in Proceedings of the 2017 ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction, 2017

Privacy-sensitive robotics is an emerging area of HRI research. Judgments about privacy would seem to be context-dependent, but none of the promising work on contextual \"frames\" has focused on privacy concerns. This work studies the impact of contextual \"frames\" on local users\ privacy judgments in a home telepresence setting. Our methodology consists of using an online questionnaire to collect responses to animated videos of a telepresence robot after framing people with an introductory paragraph. The results of four studies indicate a large effect of manipulating the robot operator\s identity between a stranger and a close confidante. It also appears that this framing effect persists throughout several videos. These findings serve to caution HRI researchers that a change in frame could cause their results to fail to replicate or generalize. We also recommend that robots be designed to encourage or discourage certain frames. privacy, robotics

authors: Matthew Rueben and Frank Bernieri and Cindy Grimm and William Smart

Authors: Matthew Rueben and Frank Bernieri and Cindy Grimm and William Smart