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Auditory cues facilitate situational awareness by enabling humans to infer what is happening in the nearby environment. Unlike humans, many robots do not continuously produce perceivable state-expressive sounds. In this work, we propose the use of iconic auditory signals that mimic the sounds produced by a robot»s operations. In contrast to artificial sounds (e.g., beeps and whistles), these signals are primarily functional, providing information about the robot»s actions and state. We analyze the effects of two variations of robot sound, tonal and broadband, on auditory localization during a human-robot collaboration task. Results from 24 participants show that both signals significantly improve auditory localization, but the broadband variation is preferred by participants. We then present a computational formulation for auditory signaling and apply it to the problem of auditory localization using a human-subjects data collection with 18 participants to learn optimal signaling policies.
Cha et al. (Mon,) studied this question.