ROSYMar 5, 2021

Haptic Feedback Improves Human-Robot Agreement and User Satisfaction in Shared-Autonomy Teleoperation

arXiv:2103.03453v133 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the issue of user dissatisfaction and reduced control in safety-guaranteed teleoperation for human-robot interaction, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of reduced human-robot agreement and user satisfaction in shared-autonomy teleoperation by introducing a novel haptic feedback paradigm, finding that it improves task performance, satisfaction, and situational awareness in a UAV search-and-rescue simulation with twelve users.

Shared autonomy teleoperation can guarantee safety, but does so by reducing the human operator's control authority, which can lead to reduced levels of human-robot agreement and user satisfaction. This paper presents a novel haptic shared autonomy teleoperation paradigm that uses haptic feedback to inform the user about the inner state of a shared autonomy paradigm, while still guaranteeing safety. This differs from haptic shared control, which uses haptic feedback to inform the user's actions, but gives the human operator full control over the robot's actions. We conducted a user study in which twelve users flew a simulated UAV in a search-and-rescue task with no assistance or assistance provided by haptic shared control, shared autonomy, or haptic shared autonomy. All assistive teleoperation methods use control barrier functions to find a control command that is both safe and as close as possible to the human-generated control command. For assistive teleoperation conditions with haptic feedback, we apply a force to the user that is proportional to the difference between the human-generated control and the safe control. We find that haptic shared autonomy improves the user's task performance and satisfaction. We also find that haptic feedback in assistive teleoperation can improve the user's situational awareness. Finally, results show that adding haptic feedback to shared-autonomy teleoperation can improve human-robot agreement.

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