ROAIHCMar 2, 2022

The role of haptic communication in dyadic collaborative object manipulation tasks

arXiv:2203.01287v15 citationsh-index: 37
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of enhancing physical human-robot interaction for industrial applications by leveraging haptic cues, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods for intention decoding and coordination.

The study tackled the problem of improving human-robot collaboration by investigating haptic communication in dyadic tasks, finding that haptic feedback reduced completion time and increased cooperative movements, with performance improvements observed through decreased ball velocity peaks and more consistent strategies.

Intuitive and efficient physical human-robot collaboration relies on the mutual observability of the human and the robot, i.e. the two entities being able to interpret each other's intentions and actions. This is remedied by a myriad of methods involving human sensing or intention decoding, as well as human-robot turn-taking and sequential task planning. However, the physical interaction establishes a rich channel of communication through forces, torques and haptics in general, which is often overlooked in industrial implementations of human-robot interaction. In this work, we investigate the role of haptics in human collaborative physical tasks, to identify how to integrate physical communication in human-robot teams. We present a task to balance a ball at a target position on a board either bimanually by one participant, or dyadically by two participants, with and without haptic information. The task requires that the two sides coordinate with each other, in real-time, to balance the ball at the target. We found that with training the completion time and number of velocity peaks of the ball decreased, and that participants gradually became consistent in their braking strategy. Moreover we found that the presence of haptic information improved the performance (decreased completion time) and led to an increase in overall cooperative movements. Overall, our results show that humans can better coordinate with one another when haptic feedback is available. These results also highlight the likely importance of haptic communication in human-robot physical interaction, both as a tool to infer human intentions and to make the robot behaviour interpretable to humans.

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