Title :
Task switching and cognitively compatible guidance for control of multiple robots
Author :
Lewis, Michael ; Shi-Yi Chien ; Mehrotra, Siddarth ; Chakraborty, Nilanjan ; Sycara, Katia
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract :
Decision aiding sometimes fails not because following guidance would not improve performance but because humans have difficulty in following guidance as it is presented to them. This paper presents a new analysis of data from multi-robot control experiments in which guidance in a demonstrably superior robot selection strategy failed to produce improvement in performance. We had earlier suggested that the failure to benefit might be related to loss of volition in switching between robots being controlled. In this paper we present new data indicating that spatial, and hence cognitive proximity, of robots may play a role in making volitional switches more effective. Foraging tasks, such as search and rescue or reconnaissance, in which UVs are either relatively sparse and unlikely to interfere with one another or employ automated path planning, form a broad class of applications in which multiple robots can be controlled sequentially in a round-robin fashion. Such human-robot systems can be described as a queuing system in which the human acts as a server while robots presenting requests for service are the jobs. The possibility of improving system performance through well- known scheduling techniques is an immediate consequence. Two experiments investigating scheduling interventions are described. The first compared a system in which all anomalous robots were alarmed (Alarm), one in which alarms were presented singly in the order in which they arrived (FIFO) and a Control condition without alarms. The second experiment employed failures of varying difficulty supporting an optimal shortest job first (SJF) policy. SJF, FIFO, and Alarm conditions were compared. In both experiments performance in directed attention conditions was poorer than predicted. This paper presents new data comparing the spatial proximity in switches between robots selected by the operator (Alarm conditions) and those dictated by the system (FIFO and SJF conditions).
Keywords :
mobile robots; multi-robot systems; path planning; queueing theory; scheduling; alarm; anomalous robots; automated path planning; cognitive proximity; cognitively compatible guidance; data analysis; foraging tasks; human-robot systems; multiple robot control; optimal SJF policy; optimal shortest job first policy; queuing system; robot selection strategy; scheduling techniques; spatial proximity; task switching; Cameras; Monitoring; Robot kinematics; Robot vision systems; Switches;
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Biomimetics (ROBIO), 2014 IEEE International Conference on
DOI :
10.1109/ROBIO.2014.7090464