• DocumentCode
    236002
  • Title

    Safety considerations for small Unmanned Aerial Systems with distributed users

  • Author

    Duncan, Brittany A. ; Murphy, R.R.

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Robot-Assisted Search & Rescue, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    27-30 Oct. 2014
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    7
  • Abstract
    This paper identifies three categories of safety risks posed by allowing multiple users to engage with small Unmanned Aerial Systems (sUAS) and offers five recommendations on how to reduce or mitigate these vulnerabilities. Data from sUAS can benefit multiple experts at a disaster who may not be familiar with robots or colocated with the pilot. Two different styles of interfaces have been developed and tested with responders conducting exercises to facilitate team coordination with a quadrotor at Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service´s Disaster City® over a four year period. The two interfaces illustrate three distinct categories of safety concerns: unsafe control regimes, loss of situation awareness, and increased stress. Five recommendations are proposed to mitigate or eliminate the safety concerns: separate the payload camera from the platform, giving the pilot a dedicated “pilot-cam” and the experts a fully gimbaled payload; use artificial intelligence to resolve conflicts between competing directives from multiple experts; allow the pilot, or a software agent, to turn off the expert´s ability to control or communication; use multi-modal warnings rather than rely on visual cues; and add guarded motion to prevent collisions.
  • Keywords
    aerospace computing; aerospace safety; autonomous aerial vehicles; collision avoidance; control engineering computing; helicopters; image sensors; robot vision; software agents; Texas A&M engineering extension service disaster city; artificial intelligence; collision prevention; distributed users; fully gimbaled payload; guarded motion; multimodal warnings; payload camera; pilot-cam; quadrotor; sUAS; safety concerns; safety considerations; safety risks; situation awareness; small unmanned aerial systems; software agent; team coordination; unsafe control regimes; Cameras; Chemicals; Cities and towns; Robot vision systems; Safety; Visualization;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Safety, Security, and Rescue Robotics (SSRR), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Hokkaido
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SSRR.2014.7017648
  • Filename
    7017648