The Effect of Voice and Repair Strategy on Trust Formation and Repair in Human-Robot Interaction
Journal article, 2025

Trust is essential for social interactions, including those between humans and social artificial agents, such as robots. Several factors and combinations thereof can contribute to the formation of trust and, importantly in the case of machines that work with a certain margin of error, to its maintenance and repair after it has been breached. In this article, we present the results of a study aimed at investigating the role of robot voice and chosen repair strategy on trust formation and repair in a collaborative task. People helped a robot navigate through a maze, and the robot made mistakes at pre-defined points during the navigation. Via in-game behaviour and follow-up questionnaires, we could measure people's trust towards the robot. We found that people trusted the robot speaking with a state-of-the-art synthetic voice more than with the default robot voice in the game, even though they indicated the opposite in the questionnaires. Additionally, we found that three repair strategies that people use in human-human interaction (justification of the mistake, promise to be better and denial of the mistake) work also in human-robot interaction.

Auditory feedback

CCS Concepts:

Human-centered computing -> Human computer interaction (HCI)

Author

Marta Romeo

Heriot-Watt University

Ilaria Torre

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

University of Gothenburg

Sebastien Le Maguer

University of Helsinki

Trinity College Dublin

Alexander Sleat

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Angelo Cangelosi

University of Manchester

Iolanda Leite

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

ACM Transactions on Human-Robot Interaction

25739522 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 2 33

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Robotics and automation

Human Computer Interaction

DOI

10.1145/3711938

More information

Latest update

5/19/2025