• DocumentCode
    12772
  • Title

    The Impact of Haptic Feedback Quality on the Performance of Teleoperated Assembly Tasks

  • Author

    Wildenbeest, Jeroen G. W. ; Abbink, David A. ; Heemskerk, C.J.M. ; van der Helm, Frans C. T. ; Boessenkool, H.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Biomech. Eng., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
  • Volume
    6
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    April-June 2013
  • Firstpage
    242
  • Lastpage
    252
  • Abstract
    In teleoperation, haptic feedback allows the human operator to touch the remote environment. Yet, it is only partially understood to what extent the quality of haptic feedback contributes to human-in-the-loop task performance. This paper presents a human factors experiment in which teleoperated task performance and control effort are assessed for a typical (dis-)assembly task in a hard-to-hard environment, well known to the operator. Subjects are provided with four levels of haptic feedback quality: no haptic feedback, low-frequency haptic feedback, combined low- and high-frequency haptic feedback, and the best possible-a natural spectrum of haptic feedback in a direct-controlled equivalent of the task. Four generalized fundamental subtasks are identified, namely: 1) free-space movement, 2) contact transition, 3) constrained translational, and 4) constrained rotational tasks. The results show that overall task performance and control effort are primarily improved by providing low-frequency haptic feedback (specifically by improvements in constrained translational and constrained rotational tasks), while further haptic feedback quality improvements yield only marginal performance increases and control effort decreases, even if a full natural spectrum of haptic feedback is provided.
  • Keywords
    force feedback; haptic interfaces; manipulators; task analysis; telerobotics; assembly task; constrained rotational task; constrained translational task; contact transition; direct-controlled task equivalent; free-space movement; generalized fundamental subtasks; haptic feedback quality; hard-to-hard environment; high-frequency haptic feedback; human factors experiment; human operator; human-in-the-loop task performance; low-frequency haptic feedback; remote environment; teleoperated assembly task performance; Bandwidth; Force; Haptic interfaces; Humans; Manipulators; Performance evaluation; Visualization; Teleoperation; force feedback; haptics; multimodal feedback; psychophysics; task performance;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1939-1412
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TOH.2012.19
  • Filename
    6200270