Yamazaki, AkikoYamazaki, KeiichiArano, YusukeSaito, YosukeIiyama, EmiFukuda, HisatoKobayashi, YoshinoriKuno, Yoshinori2019-09-052019-09-052019https://dl.gi.de/handle/20.500.12116/25264Currently, robotic researchers focus on developing robot systems that are explicitly designed to operate cooperatively with people in public, and provide the resources for projections for humans in public places.Our socio-technological project, engineers developed a robotic wheelchair with attaching a robot in order to provide embodied projective signals to human and designed two settings for the robot’s behavior. One is the robot turns its face towards the human (Face-to-Face model), the other is robot turns its face and they turn around its body in order to index where to go (Body Torque model). The reasons of attaching a robot to a robotic wheelchair and designed two settings are, by analysis of sociologiosts, we reveal how embodied actions of the robot as a resource for projection and considered what kind of projection are possible and how such projections provide the coordination of co-operative actions between multiple people in the public places.enEthnomethodollogyautomatic wheelchairco-operative actionsmultimodalbody-torqueface-to-faceInteracting with Wheelchair Mounted Navigator RobotText/Workshop Paper10.18420/muc2019-ws-651