ROHCMay 17, 2019

Challenges in Collaborative HRI for Remote Robot Teams

arXiv:1905.07379v19 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses trust issues in human-robot collaboration for remote hazardous operations, but it is incremental as it builds on existing interaction techniques.

The paper tackles the challenge of building trust in remote robot teams for hazardous environments by introducing a 'mediator robot' with social skills and visualization techniques, showing that initial handover of control to the robot increases supervisor trust.

Collaboration between human supervisors and remote teams of robots is highly challenging, particularly in high-stakes, distant, hazardous locations, such as off-shore energy platforms. In order for these teams of robots to truly be beneficial, they need to be trusted to operate autonomously, performing tasks such as inspection and emergency response, thus reducing the number of personnel placed in harm's way. As remote robots are generally trusted less than robots in close-proximity, we present a solution to instil trust in the operator through a `mediator robot' that can exhibit social skills, alongside sophisticated visualisation techniques. In this position paper, we present general challenges and then take a closer look at one challenge in particular, discussing an initial study, which investigates the relationship between the level of control the supervisor hands over to the mediator robot and how this affects their trust. We show that the supervisor is more likely to have higher trust overall if their initial experience involves handing over control of the emergency situation to the robotic assistant. We discuss this result, here, as well as other challenges and interaction techniques for human-robot collaboration.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes