Mixed-initiative Variable Autonomy for Remotely Operated Mobile Robots

Author:

Chiou Manolis1,Hawes Nick2,Stolkin Rustam1

Affiliation:

1. Extreme Robotics Lab, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

2. Oxford Robotics Institute, Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

Abstract

This article presents an Expert-guided Mixed-initiative Control Switcher (EMICS) for remotely operated mobile robots. The EMICS enables switching between different levels of autonomy during task execution initiated by either the human operator and/or the EMICS. The EMICS is evaluated in two disaster-response-inspired experiments, one with a simulated robot and test arena, and one with a real robot in a realistic environment. Analyses from the two experiments provide evidence that: (a) Human-Initiative (HI) systems outperform systems with single modes of operation, such as pure teleoperation, in navigation tasks; (b) in the context of the simulated robot experiment, Mixed-initiative (MI) systems provide improved performance in navigation tasks, improved operator performance in cognitive demanding secondary tasks, and improved operator workload compared to HI. Last, our experiment on a physical robot provides empirical evidence that identify two major challenges for MI control: (a) the design of context-aware MI control systems; and (b) the conflict for control between the robot’s MI control system and the operator. Insights regarding these challenges are discussed and ways to tackle them are proposed.

Funder

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

Royal Society Industry Fellowship

UK’s Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Human-Computer Interaction

Reference50 articles.

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