DocumentCode :
1418757
Title :
Autonomy and interdependence in human-agent-robot teams
Author :
Johnson, Matthew ; Bradshaw, Jeffrey M. ; Feltovich, Paul J. ; Jonker, Catholijn ; Van Riemsdijk, Birna ; Sierhuis, Maarten
Volume :
27
Issue :
2
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
43
Lastpage :
51
Abstract :
There is a common belief that making systems more autonomous will improve the system and is therefore a desirable goal. Though small scale simple tasks can often benefit from automation, this does not necessarily generalize to more complex joint activity. When designing today´s more sophisticated systems to work closely with humans, it is important not only to consider the machine´s ability to work independently through autonomy, but also its ability to support interdependence with those involved in the joint activity. We posit that to truly improve systems and have them reach their full potential, designing systems that support interdependent activity between participants is the key. Our claim is that increasing autonomy, even in a simple and benign environment, does not always result in an improved system. We will show results from an experiment in which we demonstrate this phenomena and explain why increasing autonomy can sometimes negatively impact performance.
Keywords :
control engineering computing; mobile robots; software agents; team working; automation; autonomy; complex joint activity; human-agent-robot teams; interdependence; interdependent activity; machine ability; Automation; Computational modeling; Human computer interaction; Human-robot interaction; Information technology; Intelligent systems; Man machine systems; Performance evaluation; human-centered computing; user/machine systems;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Systems, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1541-1672
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MIS.2012.1
Filename :
6127849
Link To Document :
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