Collaborative robots can augment human cognition in regret-sensitive tasks

Author:

Schlafly Millicent1ORCID,Prabhakar Ahalya1ORCID,Popovic Katarina1,Schlafly Geneva1ORCID,Kim Christopher1ORCID,Murphey Todd D1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mechanical Engineering, Northwestern University , Evanston, IL 60208 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Despite theoretical benefits of collaborative robots, disappointing outcomes are well documented by clinical studies, spanning rehabilitation, prostheses, and surgery. Cognitive load theory provides a possible explanation for why humans in the real world are not realizing the benefits of collaborative robots: high cognitive loads may be impeding human performance. Measuring cognitive availability using an electrocardiogram, we ask 25 participants to complete a virtual-reality task alongside an invisible agent that determines optimal performance by iteratively updating the Bellman equation. Three robots assist by providing environmental information relevant to task performance. By enabling the robots to act more autonomously—managing more of their own behavior with fewer instructions from the human—here we show that robots can augment participants’ cognitive availability and decision-making. The way in which robots describe and achieve their objective can improve the human’s cognitive ability to reason about the task and contribute to human–robot collaboration outcomes. Augmenting human cognition provides a path to improve the efficacy of collaborative robots. By demonstrating how robots can improve human cognition, this work paves the way for improving the cognitive capabilities of first responders, manufacturing workers, surgeons, and other future users of collaborative autonomy systems.

Funder

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific

National Science Foundation

Army Research Office

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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